2014-15 MARYLAND WOMEN’S BASKETBALL 2014-15 SCHEDULE NOTES 1-0, 0-0 B1G AP: 10/COACHES: 8 Fri. Nov. 14 Sun. Nov. 16 Wed. Nov. 19 Sat. Nov. 22 Mon. Nov. 24 MOUNT ST. MARY’S WAGNER SOUTH FLORIDA at George Washington LOYOLA BTN Plus BTN Plus TerpsTV CSN + BTN Plus #10/8 MARYLAND VS. WAGNER 109-45 2:00 7:00 3:30 7:00 Sunday, November 16, 2014 • 2:00 ET Game #2 • Home Game #2 XFINITY Center • College Park, Md. Watch: BTN Plus ($) San Juan Shootout - San Juan, Puerto Rico Fri. Nov. 28 vs. James Madison -- 2:30 Sat. Nov. 29 vs. Washington State -- 2:30 ACC/Big Ten Challenge - Fort Wayne, Ind. Wed. Dec. 3 at #3 Notre Dame ESPN3 7:00 Sun. Dec. 7 TOWSON Fri. Dec. 12 AMERICAN Sun. Dec. 21 at Coppin State BTN Plus 2:00 BTN Plus 7:00 -- 2:00 Mon. Dec. 29 OHIO STATE* BTN Sat. Jan. 3 at #16 Nebraska* CBS Thurs. Jan. 8 PURDUE* BTN Sun. Jan. 11 at Minnesota* ESPN2 Thurs. Jan. 15 at #24 Rutgers* BTN Sun. Jan. 18 ILLINOIS* BTN Plus Thurs. Jan. 22 #14 MICHIGAN STATE* BTN Sun. Jan. 25 at Indiana* BTN Thurs. Jan. 29 at Michigan* BTN Plus Sun. Feb. 1 #19 IOWA* ESPN2 Thurs. Feb. 5 at Penn State* BTN Plus Sun. Feb. 8 #16 NEBRASKA* ESPN2 Tues. Feb. 10 #24 RUTGERS* BTN Mon. Feb. 16 at #14 Michigan State* ESPN2 Thurs. Feb. 19 at Wisconsin* BTN Mon. Feb. 23 PENN STATE* BTN Thurs. Feb. 26INDIANA* BTN Plus Sun. March 1 at Northwestern* BTN/BTN Plus 7:00 4:00 6:30 3:00 9:00 2:00 7:00 3:00 7:00 4:00 7:00 4:00 9:00 7:00 9:00 7:00 7:00 TBA Mar. 5-8 Big Ten Tournament (Hoffman Estates, Ill.) Mar. 21-24 NCAA First and Second Rounds (TBA) Mar. 28-31 NCAA Regionals (TBA) Apr. 5-7 NCAA Final Four (Tampa, Fla.) *-B1G game • All times eastern Media Relations Assitant Director - Media Relations Rose DiPaula (Maryland ‘09) Office301-314-7063 Cell443-417-5266 [email protected] Twitter@dipaularose Website www.umterps.com Facebook facebook.com/marylandterrapinsofficialpage Twitter @umdwbb Frese Twitter @BrendaFrese STORYLINE • Maryland will welcome the Wagner Seahawks to XFINITY Center Sunday for a 2 p.m. tip-off. Prior to the game, the Terrapins will be honored for their 2014 NCAA Final Four run. • The Terrapins cruised past Mount St. Mary’s, 109-45, Friday as seven Terps scored in double figures. Junior Tierney Pfirman led the way with 16 points and 11 rebounds for her second career doubledouble and freshman Kiara Leslie also scored 16 points. Lexie Brown, Shatori Walker-Kimbrough, Malina Howard, Brionna Jones and Chloe Pavlech also hit double figures. The Terrapins notched 17 steals and nine blocks on the day. • Maryland is ranked No. 8 in the USA Today Division I Coaches Preseason poll and No. 10 in the Associated Press preseason poll. This is the fifth straight year the Terps have started the year ranked and third straight they’ve started in the top 10. • Maryland was picked to win the Big Ten in its first year in the league by both the conference’s head coaches and the conference media. Sophomore Lexie Brown was named to the Preseason All-Big Ten Team by the media. • The Terps are 2-0 all-time vs. the Seahawks, but this is the first meeting between them since 2000. Maryland won the most recent meeting, 89-44, on Nov. 25, 2000 in Cole Field House. • Maryland ended the 2013-14 ranked No. 11 in the final Associated Press poll and No. 4 in the USA Today Top 25 Coaches poll. They made a remarkable run to the program’s fourth NCAA Final Four and second under head coach Brenda Frese. Along the way, they handled top-seeded Tennessee, 73-62 and then beat No. 3 Louisville, 76-73, on its home court in front of a sellout crowd to go to the Final Four. 2014-15 TERRAPINS No. 0 1 2 3 4 5 12 15 22 32 33 42 Player Aja Ellison Laurin Mincy Kiara Leslie Brene Moseley Lexie Brown Malina Howard Kristen Confroy Chloe Pavlech Tierney Pfirman Pos F G G G G C G G F Shatori Walker-Kimbrough G A’Lexus Harrison F Brionna Jones C *assists per game Ht 6-3 6-0 6-0 5-7 5-9 6-4 5-8 5-9 6-2 5-11 6-0 6-3 Yr Fr. R-Sr. Fr. R-Jr. So. Jr. Fr. Jr. Jr. So. R-Fr. Fr. Hometown PPG RPG Burlington, N.J. 2.0 1.0 Newark, N.J. 9.0 7.0 Holly Spring, N.C. 16.0 6.0 Burtonsville, Md. 8.0 4.0* Suwanee, Ga. 12.0 4.0* Twinsburg, Ohio 10.0 3.0 Solon, Ohio 6.0 7.0* Cincinnati, Ohio 10.0 1.0* Williamsport, Pa. 16.0 11.0 Aliquippa, Pa. 10.0 1.0 Baltimore, Md. - - Havre de Grace, Md. 10.0 5.0 Other Averaged double-double in high school All-ACC honoree as a sophomore No. 52 overall player by ESPN Missed last year due to torn left ACL Named to All-ACC Freshmen Team Named to Coaches’ All-ACC Freshmen Team Three-sport star in basketball, soccer, softball Named to BRP All-ACC Freshmen Team Named to Terrapin Classic All-Tourney Team Named ACC Rookie of the Week (12/30, 1/6) Redshirted 2013-14 season Tore right ACL in Jan. and has lost over 30 lbs 2006 NCAA NATIONAL CHAMPIONS • 2014 Final Four • 13 Elite Eights • 5 Final Fours 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball 2014-15SEASON OUTLOOK COLLEGE PARK, Md. - The 2013-14 Terrapins experienced the thrill of the lifetime - a magical run to the NCAA Final Four. The Terps committed to each other before the NCAA Tournament and banded together to make one of the most special runs in school history. A year later, the Terps will be faced with losing arguably the most valuable player in program history and a senior class that was more than dependable, all while changing conferences to the Big Ten. “The first things that will probably come to people’s minds are that Alyssa Thomas graduated and we lost two other senior starters as well,” head coach Brenda Frese said. “How do we make up for that? How do we grow as a team, so we can sustain the standard we’ve set? The answers to those questions will reveal themselves as the season unfolds. My mind goes back a little to the year after Kristi Toliver and Marissa Coleman graduated. We had a very raw group of players who weren’t ready yet for the responsibility of helping us win every time we took the floor. That’s because we had just spent a lot of years watching great players carry us in all kinds of situations.” The difference now is that the 2014-15 Terrapins have played on the nation’s biggest stage and made huge contributions to get Maryland back to the Final Four. “The difference with this team is I think we have players that have already shown that they are ready for that responsibility,” Frese said. “Last season, what allowed us to make a run is we had players around Alyssa really emerge as the season developed. Our second, third and fourth leading scorers were freshmen. We started a freshman (Lexie Brown) at point guard and a freshman in the post (Brionna Jones), and the freshman that didn’t start (Shatori Walker-Kimbrough) played minutes similar to a starter. Then you look at a player like Laurin Mincy, who will be a fifth year senior who has shown the ability to assert herself in big games. Brene Moseley has done that as well for us. We do have players that can score the ball, which is what we’ve always built our best teams around.” Terps Go B1G After 37 years in the ACC, the Terrapins will now compete in another strong conference - the Big Ten. While there are many unknowns as the Terps head into a new era, Frese knows they will face them together. “The other question that will come up is ‘What will it be like playing in the Big Ten?’ The answer to that one is ‘We’ll all find out together’. I think the conference race will be pretty competitive. I’ll be surprised if any one team dominates the league. I think there will be a lot of teams that on a given night can get a win. What’s going to be a lot of fun for our players is that we’ll be going into road arenas that have better fan support that what we’re used to seeing.” New Faces The Terrapins will welcome three freshmen - Kristen Confroy (Solon, Ohio), Aja Ellison (Burlington, N.J.) and Kiara Leslie (Holly Springs, N.C.) - to the lineup. “Our three true freshmen are each at different points in their progression right now,” Frese said. “They’ve each been here since the middle of the summer and they’ve already been immersed academically. Basketball-wise, Kiara Leslie and Aja Ellison are both coming back from injuries that made them miss their senior years of basketball. Kristen Confroy has a unique experience in that this is the first time she’s played only one sport. In high school, she was a star soccer and softball player as well. Health-wise, I would say Kiara is ahead of Aja in terms of being ready to go QUICK FACTS 2014-15 MARYLAND WOMEN’S BASKETBALL ROSTER No. Player Class. Pos. Ht. Hometown/High School 0 Aja Ellison Fr. F 6-3 Burlington, N.J./Life Center Academy 1 Laurin Mincy R-Sr. G 6-0 Newark, N.J./University HS 2 Kiara Leslie Fr. G 6-0 Holly Springs, N.C./Holly Springs HS 3 Brene Moseley R-Jr. G 5-7 Burtonsville, Md./Paint Branch HS 4 Lexie Brown So. G 5-9 Suwanee, Ga./North Gwinnett HS 5 Malina Howard Jr. C 6-3 Twinsburg, Ohio/Twinsburg HS 12 Kristen Confroy Fr. G 5-8 Solon, Ohio/Solon HS 15 Chloe Pavlech Jr. G 5-9 Cincinnati, Ohio/Sycamore HS 22 Tierney Pfirman Jr. F 6-2 Williamsport, Pa./South Williamsport Jr./Sr. HS 32 Shatori Walker-Kimbrough So. G 5-11 Aliquippa, Pa./Hopewell HS 33 A’Lexus Harrison R-Fr. F 6-0 Baltimore, Md./Digital Harbor HS 42 Brionna Jones So. C 6-3 Havre de Grace, Md./Aberdeen HS Brenda Frese Tina Langley Marlin Chinn Shay Robinson Head Coach – 13th Year (Arizona ‘93)…363-131 in 16 seasons overall Associate Head Coach, Recruiting Coordinator – 7th Year (West Alabama ‘96) Assistant Coach – 6th Year (Hampton ‘92) Assistant Coach - 1st Year (Central Florida ‘07) Libby Ellis Danielle Hemerka Sean Ehlbeck Joe Schoen Megan Rogers Katie Fowler Heather Arianna Rose DiPaula Jen Elkonoh Jim Knight Director of Basketball Operations - 2nd Year (Maryland ‘12) Director of Scouting and Player Development - 1st Year (Davidson ‘08) Director of Recruiting Operations - 1st Year (Maryland ‘12) Video Coordinator - 1st Year (James Madison ‘12) Assistant A.D. - Sports Medicine - 3rd Year (SUNY Cortland ‘03) Director of Basketball Performance - 3rd Year (Truman State ‘08) Associate Director for Academic Support - 6th Year (Syracuse ‘92) Assistant Director - Media Relations - 5th Year (Maryland ‘09) Program Manager - 11th Year (York College) Equipment Manager Page 2 Location: College Park, Md. Conference: Big Ten Enrollment: 37,000 Founded: 1856 Colors: Red, White, Black, Gold Nickname: Terrapins, Terps Arena (Capacity): Comcast Center (17,950) President: Dr. Wallace Loh (Grinnell College ‘65) Athletics Director: Kevin Anderson (San Francisco State ‘79) 2013-14 Overall Record: 28-7 2013-14 Conference Record: 12-4 (3rd) BASKETBALL HISTORY First Year of Basketball: 1971-72 (41 years) Overall Record: 850-404 (.678) Big Ten Record: NCAA Tournament Appearances/Last: 22/2014 National Championships: 1 (2006) NCAA Final Fours: 4 (1982, 1989, 2006, 2014) NCAA Elite Eights: 9 (1982, 1988, 1989, 1992, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2012, 2014) NCAA Sweet Sixteens: 11 (1982, 1983, 1988, 1989, 1992, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2012, 2013, 2014) ACC Championships: 10 (most all time - 1978, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1989, 2009, 2012) PRONUNCIATION GUIDE 0 2 3 5 15 22 32 AJA Ellison KIARA Leslie BRENE MOSELEY MALINA Howard CHLOE PAVLECH TIERNEY PFIRMAN Shatori WALKER-KIMBROUGH Brenda Frese Asia kee-AIR-ah brenn-AY moh-SLEE mah-LEE-nah klo-EE PAV-leck TEER-nee FIR-man kim-BRO FREEZE 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball Notes 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball 100 percent. We’ve seen each of them in workouts and they all have something to offer. Kiara is a really powerful player and can elevate. Aja elevates well, too and Kristen has given us indications that she’ll be able to make shots for us.” Point Guards Sophomore point guard Lexie Brown stepped up early in the season last year to establish herself as an impact player. Her performance in the Terps’ run to the Final Four gives her experience that is irreplaceable. Redshirt junior Brene Moseley and junior Chloe Pavlech also gave strong performances to give the Terrapins invaluable depth. “We’re really fortunate that we have three good options at the point guard position,” Frese said. “Lexie Brown became our starter early on last season and made the ACC All-Freshmen team. She became ‘Big Shot Brown’ for us in moments and was critical to our run to the Final Four. She’s a highly intelligent young lady and when you combine that with growing up in an NBA family, she has intangibles that others in our sport never will. Brene Moseley has had an amazing offseason. She’s really grown as a leader, which is something coaches love to see. We are all very proud of her and how she is maturing. Injuries have wreaked havoc with her. She missed her senior season of high school with an ACL, then played here her freshman season. Then she missed her sophomore season with another ACL. So entering last season, she had missed two of the previous three seasons with injuries. That can make it tough to find consistency again, especially when you want it as badly as Brene does. I’m expecting a good season from her this year and we need her. Chloe Pavlech showed us her freshman season that she could do the job, leading us to the NCAA Sweet 16 as our starting point guard. We threw her into the fire when our other point guard options got hurt. There was a bit of irony in her sophomore season, because she didn’t stay healthy during the first part of the season and she wasn’t able to play for a while. So Chloe has had two different sagas in two seasons. Obviously, we’re hoping she has a really strong junior season for us. I really enjoy coaching Chloe for a lot of reasons. She is really bright, a great communicator and she can connect with people.” Wings The Terrapins have experience and depth at the wing position as well. Redshirt senior Laurin Mincy - the Terps’ lone senior - found her stride at the end of last season just in time to help the Terrapins in the NCAA Tournament after an injury. Sophomore Shatori Walker-Kimbrough came up big for the Terps in multiple moments. Redshirt freshman A’Lexus Harrison will also find her way into the mix this season. “At the top of the list of our wing players are probably Laurin Mincy and Shatori Walker-Kimbrough,” Frese said. “They’ve each given us some really quality minutes on the perimeter. When we recruited Shatori, we did it with the idea that she could be a difference-maker for us and I think she confirmed that last season. We really want to grow her and Lexie Brown as one of the best young backcourts in the country. I love versatile players and some of our point guards can slide over to this spot as well. Kristen Confroy will be a valuable contributor here as well and it will be interesting to see if she can be sort of a combo guard for us. Laurin will likely get the first crack at filling the three spot. We’ll certainly adjust what we do to fit her qualities. She’s had a good summer and I really want her to come out with confidence. She deserves to have a really good senior season. We have some other players that can possibly bounce between the three and four spots for us. Tierney Pfirman has played the three for us and done it well. Kiara Leslie and A’Lexus Harrison may be able to get minutes here as they develop. And in her freshman season, when we were down to six available players, Malina Howard actually played some here for us, so we do have options.” “We were thrilled last season with the emergence of Brionna Jones as a reliable presence in the middle. Coming off an ACL in high school, she exceeded our expectations with her conditioning, production, feel for the game and her work ethic. She is a really driven young lady and has some of the best hands we’ve ever had here in our program. She catches everything that she gets her hands on. Malina Howard is someone we’ll really be looking to for leadership and to make a difference on the court for us. I thought she was going to get off to a fast start for us last season, but a hamstring injury really slowed things down. She can shoot the ball well and is a legit threat at the high post. Tierney Pfirman can be a very dynamic player in our front court. She has some qualities that a lot of players at this spot don’t have, in that she can play like a guard. She can grab the rebound and start the break. She can fire passes the length of the court. And she has the patented ‘Tierney-Turnaround’ jumper that she has a knack for hitting. I really want her to break out and become a consistent threat for us. Kiara Leslie, A’Lexus Harrison and Aja Ellison all have a chance to develop and earn time here. They each bring stuff that can help us, but none of them have played at this level yet. So we’ll see what happens when the lights come on. All three can run and jump and make us a more athletic team.” Staff Frese is fortunate enough to bring back associate head coach Tina Langley for the seventh season and assistant coach Marlin Chinn for the sixth year. This summer, they hired Shay Robinson as an assistant and welcomed back Danielle Hemerka as the director of scouting and player development and Joe Schoen as the director of video. Robinson, a graduate of the Air Force Academy, ran the EDGE Basketball Training Facility in Orlando, as well as had coaching stops at Air Force and at Kansas most recently. Hemerka was with the Terrapins as the assistant to the recruiting coordinator from 2009-2012. She spent two years as an assistant coach at American and one at Saint Francis (Pa.), before she returned to the Terps this summer. Schoen was an intern on the Terps’ video staff for the 2012-13 season and is a graduate of James Madison. He spent last season as the video director for the Colorado women’s basketball program. “I’m excited about this coaching staff,” Frese said. “I like all the people surrounding me and we’ve had a very positive vibe. We had to replace some folks who advanced and got hired at other places, but that’s just a byproduct of winning. I know that comes with this territory. So far, I’m really happy with the people we’ve brought in. And equally important, I think our players are too.” “United We Can” Frese and her staff have developed the tradition of choosing a team theme for each season. After the 2010-11 season, Frese and the staff felt like their young Terrapins didn’t finish out games, so they developed the theme of, “Fight to Finish,” for the 2011-12 season. In 2012-13, the staff wanted to push the team to have everyone working their hardest in all aspects of life, on and off the court, so they chose the theme, “All in to W.I.N.” The W.I.N. stood for What’s Important Now. “Each year we come up with a team theme, which is actually a lot of fun for us to create,” Frese said. “This year’s is ‘United We Can’, which I think speaks to the togetherness we have on our team right now. We think if this group really buys in and believes in each other, we can have another really good season. Some of our previous season themes were ‘Fight to Finish’, which was about continuing to battle until the very end of everything. And last year was ‘We Will’, which was a play off of the Under Armour ‘I Will’ ad campaign. It seemed appropriate and it was another way of emphasizing how important it was for us to work together. And actually, once we truly started to do that, we made a run to the Final Four. So let’s hope this year’s theme works out as well.” Frontcourt The Terps’ biggest strength the last few years has been dominating inside - on the glass and scoring in the paint. They led the ACC, and the nation for most of the year, in rebounding and points in the paint. MARYLAND TERRAPINS: 2006 NCAA Champions • 2014 Final Four Page 3 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball The Latest StatsInfo The Series • This is the third meeting between Maryland and Wagner, but first since 2000. • Most recently, Maryland beat Wagner, 89-44, on Nov. 25, 2000 in Cole Field House. Storylines Last 2 vs. Wagner Maryland leads, 2-0 11/25/00 H 12/1/84 N W 89-44 W 60-58 Series Quick Facts... Overall: Maryland leads 2-0 Frese vs. WU: First Meeting: MD 60, WU 58 (12/1/84) Last Meeting: MD 89, WU 44 (11/25/00) Series Record in College Park: 1-0 XFINITY Center: Series Record at WU: Series Record at Neutral Sites: 1-0 Current Series Streak: Maryland 2-0 Longest Maryland wins streak: 2 Longest WU win streak: Most Maryland points: 89 (11/25/00) Most WU points: 58 (12/1/84) Fewest Maryland points: 60 (12/1/84) Fewest WU points: 44 (11/25/00) MD largest margin of victory In overtime: +45 (89-44, H, 11/25/00) Stats Comparison Maryland Wagner 109.0 Scoring Offense 75.0 45.0 Scoring Defense 84.0 +64.0 Scoring Margin -9.0 .580 Field Goal %.431 .294 FG% Defense .442 .333 3-point FG% .273 .357 3-point FG% Defense .313 7.0 3-point FG Made/Game 6.0 .846 Free Throw % .565 44.0 Rebound Avg. 45.0 30.0 Rebounds Against Avg. 46.0 +14.0 Rebound Margin -1.0 26.0 Assists/Game11.0 17.0 Turnovers/Game 26.0 29.0 Turnovers Forced/Game 20.0 +12.0 Turnover Margin -6.0 9.0 Blocked Shots/Game 6.0 17.0Steals/Game 1.0 Page 4 Maryland is ranked No. 8 in the USA Today Division I Coaches Preseason poll and No. 10 in the Associated Press preseason poll. This is the fifth straight year the Terps have started the year ranked and third straight they’ve started in the top 10. • Maryland was picked to win the Big Ten in its first year in the league by both the conference’s head coaches and the conference media. Sophomore Lexie Brown was named to the Preseason All-Big Ten Team by the media. • The Terrapins cruised past Mount St. Mary’s, 109-45, Friday as seven Terps scored in double figures. Junior Tierney Pfirman led the way with 16 points and 11 rebounds for her second career doubledouble and freshman Kiara Leslie also scored 16 points. Lexie Brown, Shatori Walker-Kimbrough, Malina Howard, Brionna Jones and Chloe Pavlech also hit double figures. The Terrapins notched 17 steals and nine blocks on the day. • The Terps are 2-0 all-time vs. the Seahawks, but this is the first meeting between them since 2000. Maryland won the most recent meeting, 89-44, on Nov. 25, 2000 in Cole Field House. - Maryland ended the 2013-14 season ranked No. 11 in the final Associated Press poll and No. 4 in the USA Today Top 25 Coaches poll. They made a remarkable run to the program’s fourth NCAA Final Four and second under head coach Brenda Frese. Along the way, they handled top-seeded Tennessee, 73-62 and then beat No. 3 Louisville, 76-73, on its home court in front of a sellout crowd to go to the Final Four. • Building off of their Final Four run, the Terps return two of their three starters in Lexie Brown and Brionna Jones, but also return their second, third and fourth leading scorers in those two and Shatori WalkerKimbrough. • Lexie Brown was named to the All-ACC Freshman Team last year and is the 14th Terrapin in Brenda Frese’s 12 seasons to earn the honor. She was second on the team in scoring with 10.1 points per game and led the team in assists with 4.3 per contest. Brown was fourth among all players in the ACC in assists and third in assist/turnover ratio (1.9). • Brown was also named to the Louisville Regional All-Tournament team. She averaged 15.6 points per game in the NCAA Tournament run, with 4.6 assists. She shot 45.5% from the field, over 30% from outside the arc and 79.2% from the foul line in the Terps’ five NCAA Tournament games. • The Terrapins’ returners played a huge roll in the run to the Final Four. In addition to Brown’s contributions, Laurin Mincy was the Terps’ third leading scorer in the tournament with 9.0 points and 3.0 rebounds per game with nine steals. Walker-Kimbrough added 6.4 points and 10 steals in five games. • Head coach Brenda Frese returns to the Big Ten this year, a league in which she is 24-10 (.706) alltime. Frese was the head coach at Minnesota in 2001-02. She led the Golden Gophers to a record of 22-8 overall, 11-5 in Big Ten play and an NCAA Tournament berth. She was named Big Ten Coach of the Year in 2002 and the Associated Press National Coach of the Year before coming to College Park. • Brenda Frese signed a multi-year extension last November which will keep her at Maryland through at least 2021. With rollovers, she could be on the Maryland sidelines through 2025. She’s brought the program its first national championship, two Final Fours, five Elite Eights and 10 NCAA Tournament appearances in her 12 postseasons. Frese has also brought in 10 top 15 recruiting classes and brought home three conference titles. • The Terps are again one of the nation’s tallest teams with their average height at 6-0. Seven of the team’s 12 players are over the 6-0 mark. Maryland in the B1G Maryland is in its first season as a member of the Big Ten conference after playing in the ACC for 38 years. The Terrapins won 10 ACC Tournament titles and four ACC regular season titles. • The Terps are 44-29 (.603) all-time against their 2014-15 Big Ten opponents. • Maryland has won nine straight games against Big Ten teams, dating back to 2007. The last loss to a Big Ten opponent was when the third-ranked Terps fell at No. 4 Rutgers, 68-60, on Dec. 3, 2007. • In the 12 years under Frese, the Terps are 12-4 (.750) against their new conference opponents. • Frese is 24-10 (.706) all-time vs. Big Ten opponents, which includes her time at Minnesota (2001-02) and at Ball State (1999-01). • Maryland is 5-2 (.714) against Big Ten teams at home in XFINITY Center. All are under Frese. Those two losses were against Penn State on Dec. 4, 2002 and against Ohio State in the NCAA Second Round in 2003. • In her one season coaching in the Big Ten (2001-02), Frese led Minnesota to a record of 22-8 overall, 11-5 in Big Ten play and an NCAA Tournament berth. She was named Associated Press National Coach of the Year in April 2002. 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball Notes 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball Milestones, Streaks, etc. • The Terrapins won the battle on the boards in 27 of 35 games last year and tied once. They outrebounded their opponents in 32 of 34 games in 2012-13. They have won the battle on the boards in 93 of 107 games since the beginning of the 2011-12 season and 121 of 138 games, dating back to the 2010-11 season. • The Terps have won 109 of 115 non-conference games since moving into XFINITY Center in 2002. • Maryland has won at least 20 games in 10 straight seasons. Glass Cleaners • The Terps will look to be one of the most dominant rebounding teams in the country, just as they have been the last few years. Last year, they outrebounded their opponents, 1489-1126 and owned a margin of +10.4, which led the ACC and was among the best in the country. • They led the ACC in rebounding in each of the last four seasons, dating back to the 2010-11 season. They outrebounded their opponents two seasons ago 1503-1037 for the second-best rebounding margin in the nation (+13.7). They were second only to Liberty (+16.9). • The Terps are averaged 14.9 offensive boards per game last year. They averaged 15.4 offensive rebounds per game in 2012-13. • The Terrapins grabbed an offensive rebound on 522 of their 1,177 missed shots last season, which is good for 44 percent. • Of their 1,098 missed shots last year, the Terps grabbed 525 offensive boards, which means they grabbed an offensive board on 47.8 percent of their missed shots. • Last year, they grabbed a rebound on 967 of their opponents’ 1,267 missed shots, which is over 76 percent. • Maryland outrebounded opponents 1631-1167 in its 36 games in 2011-12 for a margin of +12.9, which was second in the country to Liberty’s +15.6. They won the battle on the boards in 33 of 36 games. Pound It Inside • The Terrapins beat their opponents in the paint in 2012-13, 1364-855. That’s 37.2 points in the paint per game for the Terrapins to their opponents’ 34.2. Last year, they outscored them inside 1,520-987 (43.4 to 28.2). • The Terps scored 40 or more points inside last year in 16 of 35 games. They scored a season-high 60 points in the paint at Georgia Tech on Feb. 23. All Hands on Deck • The Terps had four or more players in double figures in 19 of 35 games last year. • Maryland had seven players hit double figures on Nov. 14 vs. Mount St. Mary’s. • Maryland’s bench outscored it’s opponent’s bench last year, 1,157 to 664. The Terps’ bench averaged 33.1 points per game to the opponents’ 19.0. Maryland’s bench put up 40 or more points in 14 of 35 games. Terps in the Polls Maryland is one of the most consistent winning programs in the country. The Terrapins have been ranked 2014-15 Rankings Watch — Terps & Opponents In The Polls Maryland – AP High/Low: 10/10 Maryland – USA Today High/Low: 8/8 Associated Press SCHOOL ps23456789 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Iowa 19 James Madison RV MARYLAND10 Michigan State 14 MinnesotaRV Nebraska16 NorthwesternRV Notre Dame 3 Penn State RV PurdueRV Rutgers24 South Florida RV ESPN/USA Today SCHOOL ps23456789 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Iowa 19 James Madison RV MARYLAND8 Michigan State 15 Nebraska16 Notre Dame 3 Ohio State RV Penn State RV Purdue RV RutgersRV South Florida RV MARYLAND TERRAPINS: 2006 NCAA Champions • 2014 Final Four ThePolls Associated Press Top 25 - Preseason Rk Team 13-14 Rec 1. Connecticut (35) 40-0 2. South Carolina 29-5 3. Notre Dame 37-1 4.Tennessee 29-6 5. Texas A&M 27-9 6.Stanford 33-4 7.Duke 28-7 8.Baylor 32-5 9.Texas 22-12 10.MARYLAND 28-7 11.Kentucky 26-9 12.Louisville 33-5 13. North Carolina 27-10 14. Michigan State 23-10 15.California 22-10 16.Nebraska 26-7 17. West Virginia 30-5 18.Depaul 29-7 19.Iowa 27-9 20. Oregon State 24-11 21. Oklahoma State 25-9 22.Dayton 23-8 23.UCLA 13-18 24.Rutgers 28-9 25.Syracuse 23-10 Pts 875 824 798 749 702 645 577 573 532 531 522 505 504 433 423 314 306 301 236 183 158 95 86 65 65 Prev Others receiving votes: LSU 58, Purdue 45, Penn State 43, Georgia 37, Gonzaga 28, NC State 24, Vanderbilt 23, Oklahoma 17, BYU 14, Arkansas 14, Mississippi St 13, Florida St 10, South Florida 8, Minnesota 8, St. John’s 7, Oregon 5, Western Kentucky 4, Green Bay 4, Middle Tennessee 3, Iowa State 2, Northwestern 2, Arizona St 1, Colorado St 1, Albany 1, James Madison 1 USA Today Sports Coaches Top 25 Preseason Rk Team 13-14 Rec Pts Prev 1.Connecticut 40-0 800 1 2. South Carolina 29-5 739 9 3. Notre Dame 37-1 736 2 4.Tennessee 29-6 683 8 5. Texas A&M 27-9 630 10 6.Stanford 33-4 608 3 7.Duke 28-7 566 13 8.MARYLAND 28-7 543 4 9.Baylor 32-5 531 6 10.Kentucky 26-9 484 11 11.Louisville 33-5 474 5 12.Texas 22-12 458 NR 13. North Carolina 27-10 407 7 14.California 22-10 366 20 15. Michigan State 23-10 343 23 16.Nebraska 26-7 305 17 17. West Virginia 30-5 274 12 18.DePaul 29-7 246 16 19.Iowa 27-9 217 NR 20. Oklahoma State 25-9 164 15 21. Oregon State 24-11 123 25 22.Dayton 23-8 117 NR 23.UCLA 13-18 116 NR 24. LSU 21-136524 25.Syracuse 23-10 55 NR Others receiving votes: Penn State 50; Rutgers 45; Purdue 37; Georgia 29; Vanderbilt 24; Gonzaga 17; Brigham Young 16; Florida State 16; St. John‘s 16; North Carolina State 14; Iowa State 12; South Florida 11; Ohio State 10; Arkansas 9; Oklahoma 8; Oregon 8; Middle Tennessee 7; Southern California 7; Western Kentucky 5; James Madison 3; Arizona State 2; Albany 1; Arkansas State 1; Cal State Northridge 1; Marist 1 Teams in italics are 2014-15 Maryland opponents Page 5 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball in the ACC/NCAA... 2013-14 FINAL Category Scoring Offense Scoring Defense Scoring Margin Field Goal Pct. 3-Point Field Goal Pct. 3-Point Field Goals Free Throw Pct. Field Goal Pct. Defense 3-Point FG Pct. Defense Rebounding Margin Offensive Rebounds Blocked Shots Assists Steals Turnover Margin Assist/Turnover Ratio ACCNCAA Statistic RankRank 81.8 2 12 62.7 2 62 +19.2 2 5 .483 3 4 .355 4 36 5.2 11 174 .745 3 39 .385 6 91 .309 6 133 +10.4 1 7 14.9 4 2.9 13 196 18.92 5 8.59 92 +1.5 8 99 1.3 2 17 Offensive rebound stats not kept by NCAA. AlyssaTHOMAS Scoring Rebounding Field Goal Percentage Assists Free Throw Percentage Steals Assist/Turnover Ratio Offensive Rebounds Defensive Rebounds Double-Doubles Triple-Doubles LexieBROWN Assists Three-Point FG Percentage Assist/Turnover Ratio AliciaDEVAUGHN Free Throw Percentage Offensive Rebounds KatieRUTAN Three-Point FG Percentage 19.04 56 10.92 20 .513 11 60 4.15 139 .797 10 148 1.514 1.6 8 106 2.9 12 7.9 1 281 2 41 1 4.34 110 .367 9 1.9 3 59 .780 2.7 11 14 .431 2 in 77 straight Associated Press polls, dating back to the preseason poll of the 2010-11 season. • Maryland has been ranked for 135 weeks in the last 10 seasons, with 117 of those weeks in the Associated Press top 10. • The Terps appeared in the AP Top 5 on Dec. 12, 2011 for the first time since they ended the 2008-09 season ranked No. 3 and have been ranked ever since. • This marks the 162nd week head coach Brenda Frese has had a team ranked in her career. Terps vs. Ranked Team Under Frese Since Brenda Frese took over in 2002-03, Maryland has 49 wins over Associated Press top 25 teams, including three last year. Most recently, the Terps beat No. 3 Tennessee in the NCAA Sweet Sixteen and No. 4 Louisville 76-73 in the Elite Eight. • The Terps won a school-record 10 games over ranked teams in the 2005-06 season, including six over top 10 opponents and four over top five teams. • Under Frese, Maryland has 20 wins over AP top 10 teams, most recently a 76-63 win over No. 4 Louisville in the NCAA Elite Eight. • Maryland has five wins over No. 1 teams in its history, including two in Frese’s time. The Terrapins beat No. 1 North Carolina twice in the 2005-06 season. Home Sweet Home Maryland has been a dominant home team, especially over the last decade. • The Terps are 467-127 (.786) all time in College Park, dating back to the inaugural 1971-72 season. • Maryland is 174-32 (.845) all time in XFINITY Center. • The Terps are also 174-32 (.845) at home under Brenda Frese, whose first season in College Park was the inaugural season of XFINITY Center. • Maryland is 5-2 (.714) against Big Ten teams at home in XFINITY Center. All are under Frese. Those two losses were against Penn State on Dec. 4, 2002 and against Ohio State in the NCAA Second Round in 2003. • The Terrapins are 109-6 (.948) all-time in non-conference games in XFINITY Center. • The Terps own one of the longest home win streaks in NCAA history. They won 48 straight home games starting Nov. 9, 2007 with a 76-52 season-opening win over Princeton. The streak ended on Jan. 21, 2010 with an 80-77 loss to Miami. Double-Doubles • Freshman Brionna Jones picked up her first of her career with a career-high 18 points and 10 rebounds in 20 minutes vs. Syracuse on Jan. 14. • Sophomore Tierney Pfirman scored 16 points with 11 rebounds for the second of her career vs. Mount St. Mary’s on Nov. 14. She added her first with 11 points and 10 rebounds in 10 minutes vs. Virginia Tech on March 2. • Laurin Mincy notched her first, and only, with 21 points and 12 rebounds in the Terps’ Sweet Sixteen win over Texas A&M in March 2012. Overtime is Our Time The phrase, “Overtime is our time!” became one of the catch phrases from the Terps’ 2006 NCAA title run. That 2005-06 team went 6-0 in overtime games and won the national title in extra time vs. Duke. • Maryland is 15-2 (.882) in overtime games in head coach Brenda Frese’s 12 years. • In the 2007-08 season, Frese was not on the sidelines for two of the Terps’ overtime games. She missed a 97-86 double overtime loss at North Carolina on Jan. 26, 2008 and a 74-71 win at Virginia Tech on Feb. 4, 2008, due to her pregnancy with her sons. • The Terps’ only overtime loss with Frese on the sidelines was a 95-91 loss at Florida State on Jan. 16, 2005. Terps Welcome Top 10 Recruiting Class for 2014 Head coach Brenda Frese and her staff welcome the 10th top 10 class in her 13 years this season. • Forward Brianna Fraser (Brooklyn, N.Y.) and forward Kiah Gillespie (Meriden, Conn.) make up the No. 10 recruiting class in the country. • Fraser, who is 6-3, is the No. 12 overall player by the All Star Girls Report and is the No. 15 overall recruit in the class by ESPN’s Hoop Gurlz. • Gillespie, who is 6-2, is ranked No. 14 by Prospects Nation and No. 27 by ESPN’s Hoop Gurlz. She’s led her team to two state titles already. Team Tyler In September 2010, Brenda Frese’s two-year old son, Tyler Thomas, was diagnosed with leukemia. He started treatments immediately at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore and has been clear from leukemia cells since shortly after. On Dec. 3, 2013, Tyler took his last dose of chemo after three years of treatments and will go to Hopkins for a monthy checkup until May of 2015. Page 6 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball Notes 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball • In 2010-11, some starters from the 2006 national championship team - Marissa Coleman, Shay Doron, Laura Harper and Kristi Toliver - got together and formed the Team Tyler Foundation. • The Team Tyler Foundation raises money for leukemia research and patients at Hopkins. Fear the Turtle! Maryland is one of the most consistent programs in the country over the last 10 years: • Maryland’s bid to the 2014 NCAA Tournament marked its 11th straight postseason appearance. Ten of those 11 were NCAA Tournament bids. • The Terps have averaged 27.8 wins per season the last 10 years, including nine consecutive 20-win seasons from 2004-2013. • Frese has led the Terps to four 30-win seasons. 2005-06 marked the first 30-win season for the program, as the Terrapins went 34-4 and won the 2006 NCAA title. The Terps won 30 games in 2007-08 when they went 33-4 and in 2008-09 when they went 31-5. In 2012-13, the Terps notched the program’s fourth 30-win season with their record of 31-5. • The Terrapins have won at least one postseason game (NCAA, or WNIT) in each of the last 10 seasons. • The Terps have advanced to the NCAA SWEET 16 six times in the last nine years. • Maryland earned a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament in 2008 and 2009 and a No. 2 seed in 2006, 2007 and 2012. MARYLAND TERRAPINS: 2006 NCAA Champions • 2014 Final Four 2014-15 RECORD WHEN... Overall.................................................................................. 1-0 In B1G Games........................................................................... vs. Ranked Opponents.............................................................. vs. 2013 NCAA Tournament Teams........................................... At Home................................................................................ 1-0 Away.......................................................................................... Neutral Sites.............................................................................. Leading at the Half............................................................... 1-0 Trailing at the Half..................................................................... Tied at the Half.......................................................................... In Overtime................................................................................ Games decided by 10 or more points................................... 1-0 Games decided by 6-10 points.................................................. Games decided by 5 points or less........................................... Score 80 or more points....................................................... 1-0 Score 70-79 points.................................................................... Score 60-69 points.................................................................... Score 50-59 points.................................................................... Less than 50 points................................................................... Allow more than 80 points......................................................... Allow 70-79 points..................................................................... Allow 60-69 points..................................................................... Allow 50-59 points..................................................................... Allow less than 50 points...................................................... 1-0 Posting Higher FG%............................................................. 1-0 Opp. Posts Higher FG%............................................................ Shoot 50% or above from the field....................................... 1-0 Shoot 46-49% from the field...................................................... Shoot 41-45% from the field...................................................... Shoot 36-40% from the field...................................................... Shoot 31-35% from the field...................................................... Shoot 30% or lower................................................................... Allow 50% shooting or above.................................................... Allow 46-49% shooting from the field........................................ Allow 41-45% shooting from the field........................................ Allow 36-40% shooting from the field........................................ Allow 31-35% shooting from the field........................................ Allow 30% shooting or lower................................................ 1-0 FT% better than opponent.................................................... 1-0 FT% worse than opponent........................................................ FT% equal to opponent............................................................. FT% better than 90%................................................................. FT% 81-90%......................................................................... 1-0 FT% 71-80%.............................................................................. FT% 61-70%.............................................................................. FT% 60% or worse.................................................................... Opponent FT% above 90%....................................................... Opponent FT% 81-90%............................................................. Opponent FT% 71-80%............................................................. Opponent FT% 61-70%............................................................. Opponent FT% 60% or worse.............................................. 1-0 Make 8 or more three pointers.................................................. Between 4-7 three pointers.................................................. 1-0 Less than 4 three pointers......................................................... Opponent makes 8 or more three pointers................................ Between 4-7 three pointers.................................................. 1-0 Less than 4 three pointers......................................................... Outrebounding Opponent..................................................... 1-0 Outrebounded by Opponent...................................................... Rebounds are Equal.................................................................. Less turnovers than Opponent............................................. 1-0 More turnovers than Opponent.................................................. Turnovers are Equal.................................................................. One player in double figures...................................................... Two players in double figures.................................................... Three players in double figures................................................. Four players in double figures................................................... Five or more players in double figures................................. 1-0 None.......................................................................................... Leading with 10:00 minutes left............................................ 1-0 Trailing with 10:00 minutes left.................................................. Tied with 10:00 minutes left....................................................... Leading with 5:00 minutes left.............................................. 1-0 Trailing with 5:00 minutes left.................................................... Tied with 5:00 minutes left......................................................... Leading with 1:00 minute left................................................ 1-0 Trailing with 1:00 minute left...................................................... Tied with 1:00 minute left........................................................... On Monday................................................................................ On Tuesday............................................................................... On Wednesday.......................................................................... On Thursday.............................................................................. On Friday.............................................................................. 1-0 On Saturday.............................................................................. On Sunday................................................................................. In November......................................................................... 1-0 In December.............................................................................. In January.................................................................................. In February................................................................................ In March..................................................................................... In April........................................................................................ Page 7 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball BrendaFRESE 364-131 (16th year)/307-101 (13th year at Maryland) There was no better fit for the University of Maryland women’s basketball program than head coach Brenda Frese. The 2002 Associated Press (AP) National Coach of the Year arrived in College Park with great expectations and has not disappointed. Reviving a once-prominent women’s basketball program back to the national stage, her high work rate and positive attitude has resulted in two Final Fours, 11-straight top 15 recruiting classes and a National Championship in 2006. Frese has balanced that strong work ethic with a fun and family-friendly environment, also becoming a wife and a mother of twin boys, giving birth to them in the midst of one of the most successful seasons in the program’s history. With the birth of her twins in February of 2008, she becomes one of only six coaches to win a national championship and be a parent. Now in her 13th season at Maryland, Frese has guided Maryland to a National Championship in 2006, two Final Fours, 10 winning seasons, 10-straight 20-win seasons, four 30-win campaigns and 10 trips to the NCAA Tournament. In 2013, she signed an extension through at least June of 2021. “This has been an incredible journey and winning the national championship in 2006 was just the beginning,” Frese said. “My coaching staff and I had the belief we could win a national championship here at Maryland. With all the administrative support, the first-class facilities - we knew we could build something great. We did not set any timetables, but what we have achieved so far ... it’s beyond expectations.” Former Athletics Director Deborah A. Yow courted the 2002 AP National Coach of the Year because of Frese’s reputation for making amazing turnarounds and her relentless work ethic in recruiting. Described as dynamic, overachieving, determined and enthusiastic, the 43-year old coach is one of college basketball’s stars. Standing atop the podium in Boston in 2006, Frese became the fifth-youngest coach (age 35) in NCAA history to win a national title and only the ninth to win in her first trip to the Final Four. Frese has built the team’s success around recruiting, hard work and a positive atmosphere. The instant she arrived on campus, she determinedly worked the recruiting trails in an effort to reclaim the elite status Maryland once had in the 1980s. Success came quickly and early. Before she even coached a game in the newlyconstructed XFINITY Center, she received commitments from a pair of high school All-Americans, including Shay Doron, who went on to become a three-time All-ACC pick and a WNBA Draft selection. In all, 26 high school All-Americans have donned a Maryland uniform under Frese’s reign. All 12 of Frese’s recruiting classes at Maryland have been ranked in the top-15, including nine rated in the top-10 and five in the top five. The landmark signings of Crystal Langhorne, Laura Harper, Jade Perry and Ashleigh Newman were rated No. 2 in the country, while the class of Marissa Coleman and Kristi Toliver was ranked No. 4 - the core of the Terps’ national championship team. Her 2010 batch of Terrapins included three high school All-Americans and a No. 2 national ranking. Frese’s recruiting classes have lived up to their billing and her pupils have earned numerous accolades. In 2012, Alyssa Thomas became the first Maryland sophomore to be named a WBCA All-American, and Page 8 was also named to the AP All-American First Team and the USBWA All-American Team. The first Terp in 17 years to garner AllAmerican nods in 2006, Langhorne was a threetime AP and USBWA AllAmerican, the program’s first multiple All-American. She was selected a WBCA AllAmerican in 2007, the first in school history since 1989, and then again received the accolade in 2008. Toliver repeated Langhorne’s AP, WBCA and USBWA All-American “trifecta” in 2008. The legendary point guard, however, became the first Terp in school history to be named to the AP’s All-America First Team as a senior in 2009 - to go along with another set of WBCA and USBWA All-American laurels. Coleman, Toliver’s classmate, also earned AP, WBCA and USBWA All-American honors at the conclusion of her illustrious senior campaign in 2009. Frese’s players have also received numerous ACC honors. Most recently, Thomas was named ACC Player of the Year as a sophomore in 2012. She is just the second sophomore in the history of ACC women’s basketball to earn the league’s most prestigious honor and went on to win the ACC Tournament MVP honor that year. Thomas garnered the league’s top honor in her junior and senior seasons as well and was just the second player in history to earn the honor three times. In her final season, Langhorne was selected the ACC’s Player of the Year, the first Terp to win the award in nearly 20 years. Toliver followed suit in 2009 - the third Terp ever to win the award. In 2005, Langhorne became the program’s first ACC Rookie of the Year since 1991. Coleman followed in her footsteps by nabbing the honor during the Terps’ championship campaign in 2006. Center Lynetta Kizer and Thomas made it four Terps in six years to be named the league’s top freshman when they won in 2009 and 2011. In all, 28 Terps have received All-ACC citations in Frese’s 12 years, including a school-record four in 2008 when Langhorne, Coleman, Toliver and Harper were selected and in 2012 when Thomas, Tianna Hawkins, Laurin Mincy and Lynetta Kizer were honored. Six Terps have been First Team ACC selections 11 times in Frese’s tenure. Langhorne became Maryland’s first three-time, first team all-conference selection and the first to be named All-ACC four times. Coleman joined Langhorne as the lone Terps to ever be selected to an All-ACC team four times, stamping her three second-team honors with a first-team selection in 2009. Thomas was also a fourtime selection and three-time first team honoree. In fact, of Maryland’s six players all-time to be selected All-ACC three times or more, five of them were recruited by Frese (Doron, Langhorne, Coleman, Toliver, Thomas). Numerous Terps have also garnered national recognition under Frese. Toliver became the first Terrapin to earn the highest point guard honor in the country, winning the Nancy Leiberman Award in 2008, after being a finalist the previous year. Several have earned spots on national player of the year candidate lists, making history in the fall of 2006. That year, for the first time ever, four players from the same team were selected preseason COACHES TO WIN NCAA TITLE ON FIRST TRIP TO FINAL FOUR BRENDA FRESE, Maryland Kim Mulkey, Baylor Carolyn Peck, Purdue Sylvia Hatchell, North Carolina Marsha Sharp, Texas Tech Tara VanDerveer, Stanford Jody Conradt, Texas Linda Sharp, Southern California Sonja Hogg, Louisiana Tech 2006 2005 1999 1994 1993 1990 1986 1983 1982 YOUNGEST COACHES TO WIN NCAA TITLE Marianne Stanley, Old Dominion - 31 years Linda Sharp, Southern California - 32 years Carolyn Peck, Purdue - 33 years Pat Summit, Tennessee - 34 years BRENDA FRESE, Maryland - 35 years 1985 1983 1999 1987 2006 WINNINGEST DIVISION I COACHES ALL-TIME (THRU 2013-14) 1. Leon Barmore (Louisiana Tech 83-02) 576-87 (.869) 2. *Geno Auriemma (UConn 86-pres) 879-133 (.869) 3. Pat Summit (Tennessee 1975-12) 1,098-208 (.841) 4. *Kim Mulkey (Baylor 01-pres) 404-86 (.824) 5. *Tara Vanderveer (Idaho 79-80, Ohio State 81-85, Stanford 86-95, 97-pres) 927-207 (.817) 6. Bill Sheahan (Mt. St. Mary’s 82-98) 372-104 (.782) 7. *Brian Giorgis (Marist 2003-pres.) 304-87 (.777) 8. *Wes Moore (Maryville 88-93, Francis Marion 96-98, Chattanooga 99-pres) NC State 2014) 583-177 (.767) 9. *Joe Foley (Arkansas Tech 1988-03, UALR 2004-pres.) 671-207 (.764) 10. *Robin Selvig (Montana 79-pres) 821-266 (.755) 11. Gail Goestenkors (Duke 93-07, Texas 08-12) 498-163 (.753) 12. Marsha Sharp (Texas Tech 83-06) 571-189 (.751) 13. *Carey Green (Liberty 00-pres) 357-121 (.747) 14. *Andy Landers (Georgia 90-pres) 821-286 (.746) 15. Jody Conradt (Sam Houston St. 70-73, Texas-Arlington 74-76, Texas 77-07) 900-309 (.744) 16. *Muffet McGraw (Lehigh 83-87, Notre Dame 88-pres) 751-259 (.744) 17. Joe Ciampi (Army 78-79, Auburn 80-04) 607-213 (.740) 18. *Sylvia Hatchell (Francis Marion 76-86. North Carolina 87-pres) 935-331 (.739) 19. *BRENDA FRESE (Ball St. 00-01, Minnesota 02, Maryland 03-pres) 363-131 (.735) 20. Van Chancellor (Mississippi 79-97, Louisiana State 08-11) 529-194 (.732) 21. *Joanne McCallie (Maine 93-00, Michigan St. 01-07, Duke 08-pres.) 518-190 (.732) 22. *C. Vivian Stringer (Cheyney 72-83, Iowa 84-95, Rutgers 96-pres) 929-341 (.731) 23. Sonja Hogg (Louisiana Tech 75-85, Baylor 95-00) 390-146 (.728) 24. Rene Portland (St. Joseph’s 77-78, Colorado 79-80, Penn St. 81-07) 693-265 (.723) 25. *Jim Foster (St. Joseph’s 79-91, Vanderbilt 92-02, Ohio St. 03-13, Chattanooga 2014-pres.) 812-311 (.723) 26. Wendy Larry (Va. Wesleyan 78, Arizona 86-87, Old Dominion 88-11) 608-234 (.722) 27. Kenny Brooks (James Madison 03-pres.)281-112 (.715) 28. Elaine Elliott (Utah 84-10) 582-234 (.713) 29. *Gary Blair (Stephen F. Austin 86-93 Arkansas 94-03, Texas A&M 04-pres) 672-272 (.712) 30. Mike Granelli (St. Peter’s 73-04) 607-249 (.709) *-active coach 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball Notes 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball candidates for the WBCA’s prestigious Wade Trophy when Doron, Coleman, Langhorne and Toliver were put on the Watch List. All five starters were tabbed preseason honorees for the Naismith Award, also a first in the history of the award. Maryland has rewritten several records over the last eight seasons. In 2007-08, the Terps became the first team in NCAA history to have four active players with at least 1,000 points on the same roster. That year, school records were broken for most home wins (21), which is also believed to be an NCAA record. The team opened the 2006-07 campaign winning 18-straight games, setting the program record for best start to a season. Maryland ended the 2008-09 campaign having won a school-record 36-straight home games, thanks to undefeated home marks in two successive seasons, and 40-consecutive non-conference games at the Comcast Center. In the 2009-10 season the Terrapins extended that streak to 48, a Maryland men’s and women’s basketball record. In 2005-06, the team’s 34 wins set a school record, shattering the previous mark of 29. The championship squad also set new standards for highest road winning percentage (.900), points (3,166), field goal attempts (2,363), 3-point field goals (216), 3-point attempts (540), free throws (690), free throw attempts (924), team free throw percentage (.747), rebounds (1,720) and blocked shots (195). Numerous individual records have also fallen in recent years. Among the most notable are the career scoring and rebounding records, which now own to Thomas. Langhorne shattered the previous marks, becoming the first-ever Terrapin to score 2,000 points and to grab 1,000 rebounds - an elite list of which Coleman later joined. Maryland’s rise into the upper-echelon of the country has bolstered the excitement surrounding the team. Over the last ten years, the program has ranked in the top-25 in the nation in attendance, including top-10 rankings in five of the last 10 seasons. In 2007, Maryland recorded the nation’s largest one-season improvement in home attendance, averaging 9,533 fans in 16 games, almost double the average from the previous season (4,183) - with more than 150,000 people making their way through the Comcast Center turnstiles, a school-record. By the end of the ‘07 campaign, the Terps were sixth in the nation in average attendance and fourth in overall attendance, as 241,280 spectators filled the stands at home and on the road to watch the Terps play in 34 games. In 2008, Maryland hosted over 160,000 fans in 21 games and was ranked eighth in the nation in average attendance that year, followed by a No. 6 ranking in 2009 (133,336 in 15 games). One of the highlights of the 2006-07 campaign was the announcement of two sellout games in Comcast Center, the first- and second-ever in the young facility. The stands were filled to capacity when the Terps hosted North Carolina on Jan. 28, 2007, breaking the ACC’s single-game record, the first women’s basketball sellout since 1992. The record was matched in the regularseason finale on Feb. 18, 2007, when Duke came to College Park. Maryland owns all 10 of the conference’s top-10 single-game attendances, nine coming since Frese has roamed the sidelines. In the classroom, the Terps have also been all-star students. 24 of Frese’s Terps have been named to the ACC Honor Roll, while five have received Academic AllAmerican nods by ESPN The Magazine/CoSIDA. The Frese File OverallConference Year Postition, SchoolWL Pct.W L Pct. Postseason 93-94 Assistant Coach, Kent State 20 8 .714 12 6 .667 94-95 Assistant Coach, Kent State 17 10 .630 12 5 .706 95-96 Assistant Coach, Iowa State 17 10 .630 5 9 .357 96-97 Assistant Coach, Iowa State 17 12 .586 9 7 .563 NCAA First Round (0-1) 97-98 Assistant Coach, Iowa State 25 8 .758 12 4 .750 NCAA Second Round (1-1) 98-99 Assistant Coach, Iowa State 25 8 .758 12 4 .750 NCAA Elite Eight (3-1) 99-00 Head Coach, Ball State 00-01 Head Coach, Ball State 01-02 Head Coach, Minnesota 16 13 .552 19 9 .679 22 8 .733 8 8 .500 11 5 .688 11 5 .688 NCAA Second Round (1-1) 02-03 Head Coach, Maryland 10 18 .357 4 12.250 03-04 Head Coach, Maryland 18 13 .581 8 8 .500 NCAA Second Round (1-1) 04-05 Head Coach, Maryland 22 10 .688 7 7 .500 NCAA Second Round (1-1) 05-06 Head Coach, Maryland 34 4 .895 12 2 .857 NCAA CHAMPIONS (6-0) 06-07 Head Coach, Maryland 28 6 .824 10 4 .714 NCAA Second Round (1-1) 07-08 Head Coach, Maryland 33 4 .892 13 1 .929 NCAA Elite Eight (3-1) 08-09 Head Coach, Maryland 31 5 .861 12 2 .857 NCAA Elite Eight (3-1) 09-10 Head Coach, Maryland 21 13 .618 5 9 .357 WNIT Third Round 10-11 Head Coach, Maryland 24 8 .750 9 5 .643 NCAA Second Round (1-1) 11-12 Head Coach, Maryland 31 5 .861 12 4 .750 NCAA Elite Eight (3-1) 12-13 Head Coach, Maryland 26 8 .765 14 4 .778 NCAA Sweet Sixteen (2-1) 13-14 Head Coach, Maryland 28 7 .800 12 4 .750 NCAA Final Four (4-1) 14-15 Head Coach, Maryland 1 0 1.000 2 YearsBall State3522 .61419 13 .594 1 Year Minnesota 22 8 .722 11 5 .688 1 NCAA — 1-1 (.500) 13 Years Maryland 307 101 .752 118 62 .656 10 NCAA — 25-9 (.735) 15 Years Overall 364 131 .735 148 80 .649 11 NCAA — 26-10 (.722) COACHING HONORS • Associated Press National Coach of the Year (2002) • ACC Coach of the Year (Coaches, 2013) • Big Ten Coach of the Year (2002) • Mid-American Conference Coach of the Year (2000) • NCAA Champions (2006) • ACC Champions (2009, 2012) • Two Final Fours (2006, 2014) • Five NCAA Elite Eights (2006, 2008, 2009, 2012, 2014) • Six Sweet Sixteens (2006, 2008, 2009, 2012, 2014) • 11 NCAA Tournament Appearances (’02, ’04, ‘05, ‘06, ‘07, ‘08, ‘09, ‘11, ‘12, ‘13, ‘14) • 11 All-American Selections • Seven Conference Player of the Year honors: ACC (2008, 09, 12, 13, 14); Big Ten (2002); MAC (2000) • Six Conference Rookies of the Year: ACC (2005, 2006, 2009, 2011); Big Ten (2002); MAC (2000) • 29 All-ACC honors: First team (11); Second team (9); Third team (4); Honorable Mention (5) • 14 ACC All-Freshman Team honorees • Five CoSIDA Academic All-Americans • Six CoSIDA Academic All-District 2 Selections • 15 Academic All-ACC Honors • 24 ACC Honor Roll Members • 14 McDonald’s All-Americans • No. 10 2002-03 Recruiting Class • No. 2 2003-04 Recruiting Class • No. 4 2004-05 Recruiting Class • No. 7 2005-06 Recruiting Class • No. 2 2006-07 Recruiting Class • No. 10 2007-08 Recruiting Class • No. 15 2008-09 Recruiting Class • No. 2 2009-10 Recruiting Class • No. 9 2011-12 Recruiting Class • No. 4 2012-13 Recruiting Class • No. 11 2013-14 Recruiting Class • No. 10 2014-15 Recruiting Class iting Class PERSONAL Education: Bachelor’s of Arts in Communications (Arizona ‘93), Master’s Degree in Athletic Admin. (Kent State ‘95) Family: Husband: Mark Thomas, Sons: Tyler Joseph Thomas and Markus William Thomas (born February 17, 2008), Parents: Bill and Donna Frese, Siblings: Deb, Cindy, Marsha, Stacy, Jeff MARYLAND TERRAPINS: 2006 NCAA Champions • 2014 Final Four Page 9 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball TinaLANGLEY MarlinCHINN Associate Head Coach• 7th year • West Alabama ‘96 Assistant Coach• 6th year • Hampton ‘92 Tina Langley is in her sixth season at Maryland and 16th in coaching overall. She was promoted to associate head coach in the summer of 2011. Langley made an instant impact her first season with the Terps. She served a crucial role in helping to lead the Terps to their first ACC Championship in 20 seasons and helped secure one of the nation’s top recruiting classes for 2010. In her six years in College Park, Langley has helped the Terrapins to a 161-46 (.778) record, the 2014 Final Four, three Elite Eights, five NCAA Tournament appearances and two ACC championships. In 2014, Langley and the Terrapins’ coaching staff helped lead the team on a remarkable run to the Final Four. The Terps suffered a disappointing loss to North Carolina in the ACC Quarterfinals. After the extra bye week before the NCAA Tournament, the coaching staff helped the Terrapins refocus and recommit. They went on to beat the Patriot League champion Army in the NCAA First Round, then a tough Texas squad with one of the nation’s best front courts in the Second Round. In the Sweet Sixteen, the Terrapins handled top-seeded Tennessee, 7362, behind a career-high 33 points and 13 rebounds from Alyssa Thomas, then became the first team in 20 years to win an Elite Eight game on an opponent’s home court. The Terrapins beat No. 4 Louisville, 76-73, in front of 14,002 at the KFC Yum! Center, which was the Cardinals’ home court. As Coach Frese’s top assistant, Langley’s responsibilities include coordinating the Terps’ recruiting efforts, assisting in player development, scouting, and on the court coaching. “Tina jumped right in and made a huge impact for us. Her work ethic is nothing short of stellar, she has an excellent demeanor with our student-athletes, and she has an exceptional ability to take on many roles and responsibilities,” said head coach Brenda Frese, “She possesses all the characteristics we need in a coach to make a positive impact on our recruiting efforts, player development, and our program as a whole. I’m looking forward to working by her side again this season.” In addition to her passion, determination, and work ethic, Langley has significant coaching experience. She had coaching stints at Toledo, Clemson and Georgia. She has been instrumental in recruiting, game preparation and floor management in each of her stops. Langley spent five seasons at the University of Toledo, beginning her coaching career with the Rockets as a graduate assistant coach in 1998-99, before moving up to recruiting coordinator and eventual associate head coach during the 2002-03 campaign. She helped the Rockets reach the postseason three times, including two NCAA Tournament appearances. During her tenure, Toledo also won three Mid-American Conference regular season titles (1999, 2001, 2003) and two conference tournament crowns (1999 and 2001). At Toledo, Langley was responsible for all facets of the program, including recruiting, scouting of opponents and coordinating the team’s academic efforts. She helped to sign two nationally ranked classes, the Rockets accumulated a 101-38 record (.679) during her time. Langley then joined the staff at Clemson in 2003, under head coach Jim Davis. In her two years with the Tigers, the team advanced to the 2004 WNIT while also orchestrating a CU-record six-signee class, which was ranked in the top 30 nationally in just her first season. After her stop at Clemson, Langley was hired at the University of Georgia as the recruiting coordinator. Langley left coaching for a couple years and earned her second master’s in Community Counseling from the University of Alabama, specializing in college mental health. She was named the Most Outstanding Graduate Student in 2008. Langley played basketball and volleyball for two seasons at Bevill State Junior College before transferring to the University of West Alabama, where she lettered twice in basketball as a guard/forward. She graduated from UWA with a degree in special education in 1996, and earned her first master’s degree in Recreation and Leisure with an emphasis in recreation administration from the University of Toledo. Langley resides in Laurel, Md. Marlin Chinn enters his sixth season as an assistant coach on Brenda Frese’s coaching staff at the University of Maryland. “We have always been about family first here at Maryland and it’s pretty special to bring Marlin back home,” Frese said. “This is where he wants to be and he already knows why Maryland is an incredible place. As we got to know each other, we quickly found Marlin shares common traits with us - loyalty, work ethic, care and concern for people and he is a tremendous recruiter. We feel as though Marlin will help us continue to set the bar high for excellence here at Maryland. We’re excited to welcome him to our family.” In his five years in College Park, he’s helped lead the Terrapins to a 13038 (.774) overall record, the 2011-12 ACC Tournament Championship, and four NCAA Tournament berths, including the 2013-2014 Final Four. Maryland’s other NCAA Tournament berths have resulted in two Elite Eight and three Sweet Sixteen appearances. Chinn has helped Maryland sign four recruiting classes that have ranked in the top-10 nationally, as well as in the recruitment and coaching of three-time ACC Player of the Year, Alyssa Thomas. In 2012, College Insiders named Chinn as of the nation’s top-10 assistant coaches, after being recognized in the top-20 in 2011. In 2013-14, Chinn and the Terrapins’ coaching staff helped lead the team on a remarkable run to the NCAA Tournament Final Four. The Terps beat Patriot League champion Army in the First Round, then a tough Texas squad in the Second Round. In the Sweet Sixteen, the Terrapins handled top-seeded Tennessee, 73-62. Maryland would then become the first team in 20 years to win an Elite Eight game on an opponent’s home court when they beat No. 4 Louisville, 76-73, in front of 14,002 at the KFC Yum! Center to arrive in the Final Four. Chinn arrived at Maryland after four seasons as an assistant coach at Seton Hall University from 2005 to 2009, including the final three seasons as the program’s top assistant coach and recruiting coordinator. In his second season on Phyllis Mangina’s staff at Seton Hall in 2006-07, he helped the program to their first winning record in Big East play in six years and a 13-win improvement over the previous season. During his five seasons at Seton Hall, Chinn helped secure a top-30 nationally ranked recruiting class in 2007, recruited a pair of Big East AllRookie Team selections, and recruited and coached two Big East All-Conference performers. The Archbishop Carroll High School alum previously spent seven seasons as the top assistant coach at Mount St. Mary’s University from 1998 to 2005. At the Mount, he helped lead the program to two NEC regular season championships in 1998-99 and 2000-01. He was instrumental in the recruitment of recruited five Northeast Conference All-Rookie Team selections, including the 2005 NEC Rookie of the Year. Prior to landing on the college scene, Chinn served as assistant boys basketball coach at Theodore Roosevelt High School (1997-98) and Archbishop Carroll High School (1994-97). Chinn is a member of both the Black Coaches Association (BCA) and the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA). He was selected to participate in the 2007 BCA Achieving Coaching Excellence (ACE) program for ethnic minority male and female basketball coaches. In the summer of 2011, Chinn returned to speak at the annual BCA Conference. In 2014, he was recognized as one of the nation’s top assistant coaches by A Step Up. Chinn is a native of Washington, D.C. and graduated from Hampton University with a B.S. in Accounting in 1992. In 1992, Chinn also served as the President of the National Association of Black Accountants. Chinn currently resides in Largo, Md. Page 10 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball Notes 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball ShayROBINSON Assistant Coach• 1st year • Central Florida ‘07 Maryland head women’s basketball coach Brenda Frese announced the hiring of assistant coach Shay Robinson in July 2014. Robinson comes to College Park after spending the previous season with the Kansas women’s basketball program. Prior to his season with the Jayhawks, Robinson worked at Air Force and worked as the head instructor at one of the most elite basketball performance centers in the country, the EDGE Training Facility in Orlando. “We’re really excited about this hire and what Shay Robinson brings to our program,” Frese said. “It’s always great when you get new ideas and new energy. He’s a dynamic guy that can help us in a lot of different ways. We also love that we’re adding his wife Tonya to our team. With their passion and values, they’re going to fit right in here at Maryland. “I always want to surround our players with great people that can help them get better. The player development piece is something that’s really important to me and it’s helped us be successful. Developing our players has always been a team effort shared by our staff and it was crucial to me that Shay is terrific at it. He was endorsed by some people in the business whose opinions I really value. One of those people is Dee Brown, who’s considered one of the best in all of basketball at player development. Shay will be working with our perimeter players and I know he’s really excited about getting started with our team.” “I am extremely excited and looking forward to the opportunity to work for Coach Frese and with the rest of the staff,” Robinson said. “I am eager to get started and to have an impact on the program as well as continuing to grow. I have always had respect for Maryland basketball and am thankful for the chance to contribute to its continued success and future legacy. It’s an honor to join this program and my wife and I are elated to be a part of the Maryland family… GO TERPS!” Robinson served for five years as the assistant director and head instructor at EDGE Training Facility, known as the premier training facility in the state of Florida. In conjunction with former Boston Celtic Dee Brown, Robinson managed daily basketball operations while performing individual and team skill development sessions, camps and clinics. His vast clientele ranged from beginning players to elite high school, college and professional athletes in the NBA and European Leagues. A native of Greensboro, N.C., Robinson worked the coaching ranks for many years. He coached the girls’ basketball team at Viera High School during the 2010-11 season, helping the squad win its first district championship while posting a 22-3 overall record. Robinson also served as an assistant coach with the boys’ varsity program at Viera from 2006-09. During the 2009-10 season, Robinson served as an assistant men’s basketball coach at Brevard Community College. There, he was in charge of guard and post player development, while assisting with offensive and defensive philosophies. Other responsibilities included recruiting, team film sessions, scouting, academic monitoring and mentorship of student athletes. Robinson graduated from James B. Dudley High School before enlisting in the Air Force in 1996. Robinson served more than eight years on active duty in the Air Force. While enlisted, he deployed on numerous tours of duty, including three tours in support of Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom, spending time as a Weapons Load Crew member on F-16s, as well as Special Operations Senior Command Post Controller. During his military career, Robinson received various medals and was awarded the distinguished John Levitow Award in 2002. He was also named Air Force Special Operations Command, Command Post Controller of the Year in 2002-03, before his honorable discharge in 2004. In August 2007, Robinson earned a bachelor of science in sports and fitness with a specialization in coaching theory from the University of Central Florida. He also holds a master of science in athletic administration from Nova Southeastern University (2010). Robinson is an active member of the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA), National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) and the Black Coaches & Administrators (BCA) organization. Robinson is married to Tonya, who is also an Air Force veteran. LibbyELLIS Director of Operations• 2nd year • Maryland ‘12 Head coach Brenda Frese and the Maryland women’s basketball team announced the hiring of University of Maryland alum and longtime member of the program, Libby Ellis, in August of 2013. Ellis was named as the program’s director of basketball operations. Ellis, a 2012 graduate of the University, was a four-year manager for the Terrapins. In her senior season, she served as a director of operations intern, assisting with all responsibilities of scheduling, travel planning and general program operations. She earned her degree in kinesiology and after graduation, she was hired as the coordinator of recruiting operations. “We’re ecstatic to have Libby in our director of basketball operations position,” Frese said. “She is more than ready for this next step in her career. Libby is highly organized, relates extremely well with our players and staff and is passionate about our team and program. She is a rising star in the making.” MARYLAND TERRAPINS: 2006 NCAA Champions • 2014 Final Four Page 11 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball #0 AjaELLISON Forward • 6-3 • Freshman • HS • Burlington, N.J. (Life Center Academy) Frese on Ellison: “After missing her senior year of basketball with an injury, Aja started working out with our team. It’s easy to see her potential. However, she suffered another setback when she needed to get her tonsils removed this summer. So, given everything she’s dealt with over the past year, we’re going to try to be smart with Aja. As a person, she’s one of the more dynamic and bigger personalities we have on the team. She’s been a lot of fun.” 2014-15Season Saw first career action in season opener vs. Mount St. Mary’s and added a bucket, a rebound abd 2 blocks (Nov. 14). BeforeMARYLAND Rated No. 45 overall by All Star Girls Report and No. 59 by Blue Star scored 950 points and 600 rebounds in three years…averaged a double-double with 10 points and 12 boards per game as a junior…missed senior season due to a foot injury...helped team win the National Association of Christian Athletes Division I national title as a junior…named the Most Improved Player on her team in 2013…named MVP of the All-City Classic last year… played freshman and sophomore seasons at Shipley School, where she was Team MVP… named All-State in freshman and sophomore years and All-State MVP as a sophomore… team won Friends League in both 2011 and 2012…Boo Williams Invitational Champion in 2010 and 2011 and named MVP…National Invitational High School Tournament contender…father, Pervis Ellison, coached her AAU team. Personal Parents are Timi and Pervis Ellison...has two siblings - Seattle and Malik...father, Pervis Ellison, played at Louisville and won 1986 national title…he went on to be the No. 1 NBA draft pick in 1989 and played for the Sacramento Kings, Washington Bullets, Boston Celtics and Seattle SuperSonics…mother, Timi, ran track at Maryland…came to Maryland because it was everything she could want in a school...named a Top Fashion Model of Philadelphia in 2009...broadcast journalism major...wants to work in television one day. ELLISON14-15 Game-By-Game OPPONENT MOUNT ST. MARY’S WAGNER SOUTH FLORIDA at George Washington LOYOLA vs. James Madison vs. Washington State at Notre Dame TOWSON AMERICAN at Coppin State OHIO STATE* at Nebraska* PURDUE* at Minnesota* at Rutgers* ILLINOIS* MICHIGAN STATE* at Indiana* at Michigan* IOWA* at Penn State* NEBRASKA* RUTGERS* at Michigan State* at Wisconsin* PENN STATE* INDIANA* at Northwestern* MINFG-A 3FG-A FT-A O-D-R PFA TOBLK STP 13 1-1 0-0 0-2 0-1-1 2 0 1 2 0 2 ELLISONSeason/Career Highs SEASON HIGHS POINTS REBOUNDS FG MADE FG ATT. 3 FG MADE 3 FG ATT. FT MADE FT ATT. ASSISTS BLOCKS STEALS MINUTES CAREER HIGHS 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 1 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 1 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 1 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 13 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) ELLISONCareer Statistics Season G-GS MP-MPG FG-FGAPCT. 3FG-FGAPCT. FT-FTAPCT. OFF DEFREB AVG PF-FOASTTOBLKSTL PTSAVG 2014-15 1-0 13-13.0 1-1 1.000 0-0 .000 0-2 .000 01 1 1.0 2-001 20 22.0 Page 12 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball Notes 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball #1 LaurinMINCY Guard • 6-0 • Redshirt Senior • 3V • Newark, N.J. (University High School) • All-ACC Honorable Mention (2012) • Preseason All-ACC Team (2012) • Wooden Preseason Top 30 (2012) • Naismith early season watch list (2012, 2013) Frese on Mincy: "When you think back to some of our big wins in recent years, it seems like in so many of them, Laurin really played a part. When she’s healthy, she is a difference maker for us. She’s been through so much adversity, that we all really want her to go out with a terrific senior season. She’s can score in a variety of ways and get to the free throw line, which is what great scorers can do.” 2014-15Season Added 9 points, 7 rebounds and 5 assists in 21 minutes in season opener vs. The Mount (Nov. 14). BeforeMARYLAND 2010 McDonald’s All-American...2009 Parade All-American...three-time New Jersey All-State selection (2007, ‘08, ‘09)...in 2007 was first freshman ever named to New Jersey All-State team... in 2007 led University High School to its first state title and the prestigious “Tournament of Champions” title...two-time New Jersey Star-Ledger Player of the Year (2008, ‘09)...2009 Gatorade New Jersey Player of the Year...named a “Girl Athlete to Remember” by nj.com as one of the best of the decade...two-time first team All-Tri State...Three-time All-County...three-time All-Conference...2007 Essex County Player of the Year...2009 averaged 18.8 pts, 5.8 rebs, 2.1 steals and 2.0 blocks per game as a junior...scored 35 pts., grabbed 7 rebs and 7 steals on national TV vs. nationally ranked South Bend Washington...two-time NJSIAA State Group I Championship MVP (2007, ‘08)...first sophomore in University HS history to exceed 1,000 career points...first junior to surpass 1,500 career points...suffered ACL tear during summer between junior and senior seasons...member of National Honor Society at University High School. Personal Daughter of Duane Mincy and Carol Smith ... has two siblings, Edward Smith and Charae Baulkman ... born in Newark, N.J. ... finished in the top-10 of her 2010 graduating class...sports hero is Michael Jordan...also considered Georgia, South Carolina, Rutgers, Miami, UNC, Connecticut ... chose Maryland because of its diversity and family atmosphere...family science major. MINCY14-15 Game-By-Game OPPONENT MOUNT ST. MARY’S WAGNER SOUTH FLORIDA at George Washington LOYOLA vs. James Madison vs. Washington State at Notre Dame TOWSON AMERICAN at Coppin State OHIO STATE* at Nebraska* PURDUE* at Minnesota* at Rutgers* ILLINOIS* MICHIGAN STATE* at Indiana* at Michigan* IOWA* at Penn State* NEBRASKA* RUTGERS* at Michigan State* at Wisconsin* PENN STATE* INDIANA* at Northwestern* MINFG-A 3FG-A FT-A O-D-R PFA TOBLK STP 21* 2-6 0-1 5-5 2-5-7 2 5 0 0 1 9 MINCYSeason/Career Highs POINTS REBOUNDS FG MADE FG ATT. 3 FG MADE 3 FG ATT. FT MADE FT ATT. ASSISTS BLOCKS STEALS MINUTES SEASON HIGHS 9 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 7 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 6 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 1 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 5 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 5 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 5 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 1 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 21 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) CAREER HIGHS 25 vs. #19 Delaware (12/29/11) 12 vs. #14 Texas A&M (3/25/12) 9 at Florida State (1/2/12) 18 vs. Michigan (11/30/11) 5 (2X) last vs. Boston College (2/2/12) 8 (2X) last vs. Georgetown (3/22/11) 10 vs. #19 Louisville (3/19/12) 13 vs. #19 Louisville (3/19/12) 7 (2X) last vs. Charleston (12/29/13) 3 vs. #14 Texas A&M (3/25/12) 4 (3X) last vs. #2 Notre Dame (4/6/14) 40 vs. Virginia Tech (1/26/12) MINCYMiscellaneous Stats CATEGORY Double-Figure Scoring 5+ assists 20+ Point Games 3+ threes Double Doubles MINCYCareer SEASONCAREER 39 1 9 7 10 1 LAST TIME 11 vs. #2 Notre Dame (4/6/14) 5 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 21 vs. Siena (12/9/13) 4 vs. Siena (12/9/13) 21 pts, 12 rebs vs. #14 Texas A&M (3/25/12) Statistics Season G-GS MP-MPG FG-FGAPCT. 3FG-FGAPCT. FT-FTAPCT. OFF DEFREB AVG PF-FOASTTOBLKSTL PTSAVG 2010-11 31-1 507-16.4 58-152.382 17-62.274 19-26.731 3141 722.3 25-02543 1315 152 4.9 2011-12 36-35 1163-32.3 156-358.436 54-135.400106-131.809 44 1171614.5 46-07469 1631 47213.1 2012-13 5-5 127-25.4 16-36.444 5-13.385 6-7.857 715 224.4 6-0 19 12 6 3 43 8.6 2013-14 33-9 551-16.7 64-166.386 19-66.288 55-72.764 2654 802.4 42-05649 222 202 6.1 2014-15 1-1 21-21.0 2-6 .333 0-1 .000 5-5 1.000 25 7 7.0 2-050 01 99.0 CAREER 107-51 2399-22.4 301-728 .413 96-281 .342 191-241 .793 110233 343 3.2 122-0180173 37 76 889 8.3 MARYLAND TERRAPINS: 2006 NCAA Champions • 2014 Final Four Page 13 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball #2 KiaraLESLIE Guard • 6-0 • Freshman • HS • Holly Springs, N.C. (Holly Springs High School) Frese on Leslie: “We’re really excited about what we’ve seen from Kiara early on. She has some terrific qualities and as she grows, she can really make an impact on the court for us. She’s a very powerful player. She missed her senior year of high school, so we’re working on getting her up to speed. I think she’ll get there, but we have to be patient.” 2014-15Season Saw first career action vs. Mount St. Mary’s and added 16 points, 6 rebounds, a block and a steal (Nov. 14). BeforeMARYLAND Ranked No. 52 overall player, No. 8 guard and earned scouts grade of 96 by ESPN’s Hoop Gurlz……ranked No. 58 overall by All Star Girls Report…averaged 20 points and 11 rebounds as a junior...missed senior season due to a hip injury...named NCBA District 5 Player of the Year as a junior and NCBA Second Team All-State…named Tri-9 Player of the Year and to All-Conference Team as a sophomore and a junior…in 2012 and 2013, named to NCpreps. com All-State team…hit the 1,000th career point mark as a junior on January 8, 2013... 2012 and 2013 High School OT Holiday Invitational All-Tournament Team…2013 Holly Springs High School Female Athlete of the Year…missed most of senior season to a hip injury. Personal Parents are Lisa and Calvin Leslie...has four brothers - Michael, Janmar, Kevin and CJ...older brother, C.J. Leslie, played at NC State and now plays in Korea...came to Maryland for the family atmosphere...criminal justice major...wants to play as long as she can then coach on the men’s college side. LESLIE14-15 Game-By-Game OPPONENT MOUNT ST. MARY’S WAGNER SOUTH FLORIDA at George Washington LOYOLA vs. James Madison vs. Washington State at Notre Dame TOWSON AMERICAN at Coppin State OHIO STATE* at Nebraska* PURDUE* at Minnesota* at Rutgers* ILLINOIS* MICHIGAN STATE* at Indiana* at Michigan* IOWA* at Penn State* NEBRASKA* RUTGERS* at Michigan State* at Wisconsin* PENN STATE* INDIANA* at Northwestern* MINFG-A 3FG-A FT-A O-D-R PFA TOBLK STP 20 6-9 2-5 2-3 1-5-6 1 0 2 1 1 16 LESLIESeason/Career Highs SEASON HIGHS POINTS REBOUNDS FG MADE FG ATT. 3 FG MADE 3 FG ATT. FT MADE FT ATT. ASSISTS BLOCKS STEALS MINUTES LESLIECareer CAREER HIGHS 16 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 6 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 6 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 9 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 5 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 3 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 1 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 1 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 20 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) Statistics Season G-GS MP-MPG FG-FGAPCT. 3FG-FGAPCT. FT-FTAPCT. OFF DEFREB AVG PF-FOASTTOBLKSTL PTSAVG 2014-15 1-0 20-20.0 6-9 .667 2-5 .400 2-3 .667 16 7 7.0 1-002 11 16 16.0 Page 14 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball Notes 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball #3 Brene “Bones”MOSELEY Guard • 5-7• Redshirt Junior • 2V • Burtonsville, Md. (Paint Branch High School) 2014-15Season • ACC All-Freshman Team (2012) • ACC All-Academic Team (2012) MOSELEY14-15 Game-By-Game Frese on Moseley: “Brene had OPPONENT a terrific offseason for us. It’s been a pleasure watching her grow and leadership qualities emerge. She’s really been tested by injuries, but she has mental and physical strength that really sets her apart. Her mind for the game has always been sharp. She also has the ability to make plays on the court and she’s never been scared of the moment.” Added 8 points, 4 assists and 3 steals in 20 minutes vs. Mount St. Mary’s in season opener (Nov. 14). BeforeMARYLAND Played four years of varsity at Paint Branch...named First Team All-Met by The Washington Post as a junior...earned First Team All-Gazette honors by Gazette newspapers in both her sophomore and junior seasons...led DC, Maryland and Virginia area in scoring with 26.2 points per game as a junior...team leader in three-point shooting, free throws, assists...averaged over 7.0 assists a game as a junior...led Paint Branch to back to back state championship games in her freshman and sophomore seasons...scored 17 to win state title and finish undefeated season as a freshman...played AAU ball for D.C. Heat...ESPN HoopGurlz -- Four stars, No. 70 player in 2011 class, No. 18 guard, 93 rating...missed senior year due to a torn right ACL. Personal: Daughter of Eugene and Beatrice Moseley...has one sibling, Esheance...came to Maryland for the family atmosphere, academic support, player development...”It is close to home so I can have support of my family and friends. When I hurt my knee, they stood beside me through everything.”...undecided major...also considered Miami, Virginia, Virginia Tech, Georgetown, Temple and James Madison....American studies major. MOUNT ST. MARY’S WAGNER SOUTH FLORIDA at George Washington LOYOLA vs. James Madison vs. Washington State at Notre Dame TOWSON AMERICAN at Coppin State OHIO STATE* at Nebraska* PURDUE* at Minnesota* at Rutgers* ILLINOIS* MICHIGAN STATE* at Indiana* at Michigan* IOWA* at Penn State* NEBRASKA* RUTGERS* at Michigan State* at Wisconsin* PENN STATE* INDIANA* at Northwestern* MINFG-A 3FG-A FT-A O-D-R PFA TOBLK STP 20 3-6 1-2 1-1 1-1-2 2 4 3 0 3 8 MOSELEYSeason/Career Highs POINTS REBOUNDS FG MADE FG ATT. 3 FG MADE 3 FG ATT. FT MADE FT ATT. ASSISTS BLOCKS STEALS MINUTES SEASON HIGHS 8 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 3 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 6 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 1 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 1 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 1 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 4 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 3 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 20 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) CAREER HIGHS 26 vs. Towson (11/16/11) 5 (3X) last at Towson (11/23/13) 10 vs. Towson (11/16/11) 15 vs. Towson (11/16/11) 4 vs. Towson (11/16/11) 7 at UMBC (11/19/11) 8 at USF (11/8/13) 8 (2X) last vs. DSU (12/14/13) 9 (2X) last vs. Ohio (11/30/13) 1 vs. #2 Notre Dame (1/27/14) 3 (3X) last vs. The Mount (11/14/14) 30 at UMBC (11/19/11) MOSELEYMiscellaneous Stats CATEGORY Double-Figure Scoring 5+ assists SEASONCAREER LAST TIME 19 13 vs. Virginia Tech (3/2/14) 14 7 vs. Clemson (2/9/14) MOSELEYCareer Statistics Season G-GS MP-MPG FG-FGAPCT. 3FG-FGAPCT. FT-FTAPCT. OFF DEFREB AVG PF-FOASTTOBLKSTL PTSAVG 2011-12 36-0 628-17.4 89-202.441 32-79.405 37-43.860 858 661.8 40-09878 021 247 6.9 2012-13 REDSHIRT SEASON 2013-14 34-1 474-13.9 63-142.444 13-42.310 55-69.797 1138 491.5 46-08652 228 194 5.9 2014-15 1-0 20-20.0 3-6 .500 1-2 .500 1-1 1.000 11 2 2.0 2-043 03 88.0 CAREER 72-1 1124-15.6 155-351 .442 46-123 .374 93-113 .823 20 97 117 1.6 88-0188133 2 52 449 6.2 MARYLAND TERRAPINS: 2006 NCAA Champions • 2014 Final Four Page 15 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball #4 LexieBROWN Guard • 5-9• Sophomore • 1V • Suwanee, Ga. (North Gwinnett High School) • Preseason All-Big Ten Team (2014) • NCAA Tournament All-Region Team (2014) • All-ACC Freshman Team (2014) • ACC Newcomer Watch List (BRP, 2013) • Lieberman Award Watch List (2013) • All-ACC Academic Team (2014) Frese on Brown: “We’re looking forward to a terrific season from Lexie. We all got to watch her grow last year as the season went on. She played a lot of minutes in pressure-packed games, and stayed poised at the point for us. She became ‘Big Shot Brown’ in critical moments and it’s great to know we have players ready for prime time. All that experience will be very valuable moving forward.” 2014-15Season Named to Preseason All-Big Ten Team and ESPN’s Need to Know List...added 12 points 4 assists and 3 steals in 18 minutes vs. The Mount in season opener (Nov. 14). BeforeMARYLAND Ranked No. 15 in Blue Star Report’s rankings...the No. 3 point guard and No. 15 overall recruit in the 2013 class according to ESPN’s HoopGurlz....averaged 18.4 points, 6.9 assists, 5.1 steals and 4.9 rebounds per game as a senior in 2012-13...led the Bulldogs (30-2) to the Class AAAAAA state championship game...named a McDonald’s All-American and a WBCA High School All-American...won gold with the US Under-18 Team at the FIBA World Championships...in 2012, recorded a triple-double with 12 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists in a victory over Mill Creek that sent North Gwinnett to the state semifinals. Personal: Lexie Brown...daughter of Tammy and Dee Brown...has three siblings, Alyssa, Alanni and Anakin...father, Dee, played at Jacksonville, then for the Boston Celtics, Toronto Raptors and Orlando Magic...he also won the 1991 NBA Dunk Contest...father is currently an assistant coach with the Sacramento Kings...mother played college basketball as well...committed when she first came to elite camp after ninth grade...came to Maryland because the atmosphere is incredible, it’s one of the most fun places she’s ever been to, the coaching staff is unbelievable, especially Coach B...committed prior to seriously looking at other schools...finance major. BROWN14-15 Game-By-Game OPPONENT MOUNT ST. MARY’S WAGNER SOUTH FLORIDA at George Washington LOYOLA vs. James Madison vs. Washington State at Notre Dame TOWSON AMERICAN at Coppin State OHIO STATE* at Nebraska* PURDUE* at Minnesota* at Rutgers* ILLINOIS* MICHIGAN STATE* at Indiana* at Michigan* IOWA* at Penn State* NEBRASKA* RUTGERS* at Michigan State* at Wisconsin* PENN STATE* INDIANA* at Northwestern* MINFG-A 3FG-A FT-A O-D-R PFA TOBLK STP 18* 4-8 2-5 2-2 1-1-2 1 4 1 0 3 12 BROWNSeason/Career Highs POINTS REBOUNDS FG MADE FG ATT. 3 FG MADE 3 FG ATT. FT MADE FT ATT. ASSISTS BLOCKS STEALS MINUTES SEASON HIGHS 12 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 4 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 8 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 5 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 4 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 3 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 18 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) CAREER HIGHS 31 at Syracuse (2/2/14) 6 (2X) last at #4 Louisville (4/1/14) 11 at Syracuse (2/2/14) 15 at #7 Duke (2/17/14) 7 at Syracuse (2/2/14) 9 at #18 NC State (1/30/14) 9 at #4 Louisville (4/1/14) 10 at #4 Louisville (4/1/14) 9 at Georgia Tech (2/23/14) 1 (7X) last at Miami (2/13/14) 5 (2X) last vs. #3 Tennessee (3/30/14) 39 at #18 NC State (1/30/14) BROWNMiscellaneous Stats CATEGORY Double-Figure Scoring 5+ assists Games with a three SEASONCAREER LAST TIME 1 18 12 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 18 8 vs. #2 Notre Dame (4/6/14) 1 25 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) BROWNCareer Statistics Season G-GS MP-MPG FG-FGAPCT. 3FG-FGAPCT. FT-FTAPCT. OFF DEFREB AVG PF-FOASTTOBLKSTL PTSAVG 2013-14 33-29 893-27.1 120-278.432 50-134.373 44-56.786 1251 631.9 58-0139 76 7 46 33410.1 2014-15 1-1 18-18.0 4-8 .500 2-5 .400 2-2 1.000 11 2 2.0 1-041 03 12 12.0 CAREER 35-31 949-27.1 127-296.429 53-144.368 50-64.781 1355 681.9 63-0151 79 7 50 35710.2 Page 16 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball Notes 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball #5 MalinaHOWARD Center • 6-4• Junior • 2V • Twinsburg, Ohio (Twinsburg High School) • ACC All-Freshmen Team (Coaches, 2013) • ACC All-Academic Team (2013, 14) HOWARD14-15 Game-By-Game Frese on Howard: “Malina sets the OPPONENT example every day as to how you become a winner in life. She leads the way in so many categories and she is an absolute pleasure to have at our university. She works so hard and cares so much, there’s nobody I want more to have a great season.” 2014-15Season Added 10 points with 3 boards, 3 assists and 2 blocks vs. Mount St. Mary’s in season opener (Nov. 14). BeforeMARYLAND Top-ranked post player coming out of 2012 class...No. 6 overall recruit on ESPN.com’s Hoop Gurlz rankings with a scouts grade of 97...led high school team to back-to-back state titles in junior and senior seasons...ended her career averaging 18.6 points, 11.9 rebounds, 3.1 blocks, 2.2 assists and 2.5 steals per game in her four years...is high school’s all-time scoring leader with 1,910 points in her four years...McDonald’s All-American (2012) and a WNCA All-American (2012)... led high school team to an undefeated season and Division I state title in 2011...named Player of the Game in championship....career highs are 39 points, 20 rebounds and nine blocks. Personal: Parents are Ronald Howard and Melodi DeLong-Howard...siblings are Dara DeLong, Danielle Smith and Marisa Howard...graduated in the top 12 of her high school class...lists Dwight Howard and former Terp great Marissa Coleman as her sports heroes...chose Maryland for the staff and people, as well as the family environment...also considered Notre Dame, Tennessee, UConn, Florida State, Duke and Stanford among others...kinesiology major...wants to be a physical therapist or sports psychologist. MOUNT ST. MARY’S WAGNER SOUTH FLORIDA at George Washington LOYOLA vs. James Madison vs. Washington State at Notre Dame TOWSON AMERICAN at Coppin State OHIO STATE* at Nebraska* PURDUE* at Minnesota* at Rutgers* ILLINOIS* MICHIGAN STATE* at Indiana* at Michigan* IOWA* at Penn State* NEBRASKA* RUTGERS* at Michigan State* at Wisconsin* PENN STATE* INDIANA* at Northwestern* MINFG-A 3FG-A FT-A O-D-R PFA TOBLK STP 23* 3-5 0-2 4-4 0-3-3 0 3 2 2 0 10 HOWARDSeason/Career Highs POINTS REBOUNDS FG MADE FG ATT. 3 FG MADE 3 FG ATT. FT MADE FT ATT. ASSISTS BLOCKS STEALS MINUTES SEASON HIGHS 10 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 3 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 3 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 5 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 4 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 4 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 3 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 23 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) CAREER HIGHS 17 vs. American (11/21/12) 10 vs. Clemson (2/14/13) 8 at Clemson (1/27/13) 12 (2X) last at Clemson (1/27/13) 1 (6X) last vs. #15 UNC (3/9/13) 3 (2X) last vs. Wake Forest (3/3/13) 4 (3X) last vs. The Mount (11/14/14) 5 (4X) last vs. Wofford (12/28/13) 4 (2X) last vs. #1 UConn (11/15/13) 2 (7X) last vs. The Mount (11/14/14) 3 vs. Michigan State (3/25/13) 34 vs. #1 UConn (11/15/13) HOWARDMiscellaneous Stats CATEGORY Double-Figure Scoring 10-plus rebounds Double-Doubles Games with a block SEASONCAREER LAST TIME 1 13 10 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 1 10 vs. Clemson (2/14/13) 1 30 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) HOWARDCareer Statistics Season G-GS MP-MPG FG-FGAPCT. 3FG-FGAPCT. FT-FTAPCT. OFF DEFREB AVG PF-FOASTTOBLKSTL PTSAVG 2012-13 34-0 832-24.5 94-194.485 8-21.381 33-59.559 48931414.1 54-04460 2517 229 6.7 2013-14 33-11 464-14.1 56-117.479 0-5.000 31-47.660 3345 782.4 46-0 23 23 11 3 143 4.3 2014-15 1-1 23-23.0 3-5 .600 0-2 .000 4-4 1.000 03 3 3.0 0-032 20 10 10.0 CAREER 69-12 1326-19.2 153-317.483 8-28.286 68-110.618 82 1412233.2 101-07086 3820 382 5.5 MARYLAND TERRAPINS: 2006 NCAA Champions • 2014 Final Four Page 17 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball #12 KristenCONFROY Guard • 5-8 • Freshman • HS • Solon, Ohio (Solon High School) Frese on Confroy: “Kristen is a young lady that I saw out in Ohio, competing against Malina Howard. She really impressed me with how many different ways she could help her team. She comes from an outstanding family. We had her at our camp and were so impressed. She’s got a nice midrange game. She’s a three sport high school star, which tells you about her athletic ability and competitive drive. She’s going to help us in our guard rotation.” 2014-15Season Added 6 points with 7 assists and 3 rebounds in first career game vs. The Mount (Nov. 14). BeforeMaryland Ranked the No. 51 overall player by Blue Star and No. 55 by All Star Girls Report… averaged 19.3 points, 6.2 assists and 4.6 rebounds per game through her high school career…McDonald’s All-American nominee...Cleveland.com Player of the Year as a senior...Miss Basketball finalist as a junior…named a NOC All-Conference player in each of her four seasons and NOC Player of the Year…honored as an All-Star by the Cleveland Plain Dealer and as Player of the Year in her senior year…named First Team All-Ohio as a junior and senior and Third Team as a sophomore…served as team captain and was team MVP in her junior year… named Defensive Player of the Year as a junior…honored with Integrity & Hustle Award… also played softball and soccer at Solon High School…named a Cleveland Plain Dealer AllStar in soccer…named NOC All-Conference in last two years in soccer…named First Team All-Greater Cleveland and Second Team All-District in soccer as a junior…honored as Plain Dealer Player of the Year, NOC Player of the Year and team Offensive Player of the Year in softball as a junior…named NOC All-Conference in all four years in softball…honored as team MVP as a sophomore and served as team captain as a sophomore and a junior. Personal Parents are Mark and Pat Confroy...has two brothers, Mark and Daniel...came to Maryland for the great staff, academics, family atmosphere and great opportunities which made it a dream come true...biology major...intends to become a sports doctor. CONFROY14-15 Game-By-Game OPPONENT MOUNT ST. MARY’S WAGNER SOUTH FLORIDA at George Washington LOYOLA vs. James Madison vs. Washington State at Notre Dame TOWSON AMERICAN at Coppin State OHIO STATE* at Nebraska* PURDUE* at Minnesota* at Rutgers* ILLINOIS* MICHIGAN STATE* at Indiana* at Michigan* IOWA* at Penn State* NEBRASKA* RUTGERS* at Michigan State* at Wisconsin* PENN STATE* INDIANA* at Northwestern* MINFG-A 3FG-A FT-A O-D-R PFA TOBLK STP 22 3-8 0-3 0-0 1-2-3 0 7 0 0 1 6 CONFROYSeason/Career Highs SEASON HIGHS POINTS REBOUNDS FG MADE FG ATT. 3 FG MADE 3 FG ATT. FT MADE FT ATT. ASSISTS BLOCKS STEALS MINUTES CAREER HIGHS 6 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 3 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 3 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 8 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 3 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 7 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 1 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 22 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) CONFROYCareer Statistics Season G-GS MP-MPG FG-FGAPCT. 3FG-FGAPCT. FT-FTAPCT. OFF DEFREB AVG PF-FOASTTOBLKSTL PTSAVG 2014-15 1-0 22-22.0 3-8 .375 0-3 .000 0-0 .000 12 3 3.0 0-070 01 66.0 Page 18 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball Notes 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball #15 ChloePAVLECH Guard • 5-9 • Junior• 2V • Cincinnati, Ohio (Sycamore High School) • ACC Rookie of the Week (1/28/13) • ACC All-Freshmen Team (BRP, 2013) PAVLECH14-15 Game-By-Game Frese on Pavlech: “Chloe is one OPPONENT of the most dynamic young people we’ve ever had in our program. Put her in any situation and she seems to figure out a way to be successful. She had a good freshmen season for us, then suffered some setbacks her sophomore year. Now, hopefully, we can get her back on track for her junior season.” 2014-15Season Added 10 points with 2 steals and an assist in 15 minutes in season opener vs. The Mount (Nov. 14). BeforeMaryland Ranked No. 23 point guard on ESPN.com’s Hoop Gurlz rankings with a scouts grade of 91... as a senior, averaged 14 ppg, 7 rpg, 5 apg, and 3 steals...Sporting News 2011 High School All-American Honorable Mention... Cincinnati Enquirer Division I All Area First Team as a junior... All-Southwest Ohio District 16 in both sophomore and junior years... named First Team All-Greater Miami Conference as a junior and sophomore...also earned First Team Coaches Association Honors as a junior in 2011...named Honorable Mention All-Ohio in 2011...Second Team All-Southwest District in 2011...served as team captain for Sycamore in sophomore and junior seasons ...played for Paula Hayden at Sycamore...also played for Tom Jenkins with Sports City U. Personal Parents are Lauren Pavlech and Kelly Jackson...has eight siblings - Kelly, Jason, Christian, Taylor, Davonte, Kiah, Jayden, Grace...if she didn’t play basketball she would be a bowler... lists former Terrapin Marissa Coleman as her sports heroine...when she heard about Coach Frese’s son Tyler’s leukemia diagnosis she got involved with leukemia awareness...has organized a flash mob...came to Maryland because it was her dream school...also considered Miami (FL), Notre Dame, Florida State, Louisville and Xavier... broadcast journalism major and wants to become a sports broadcaster or coach. MOUNT ST. MARY’S WAGNER SOUTH FLORIDA at George Washington LOYOLA vs. James Madison vs. Washington State at Notre Dame TOWSON AMERICAN at Coppin State OHIO STATE* at Nebraska* PURDUE* at Minnesota* at Rutgers* ILLINOIS* MICHIGAN STATE* at Indiana* at Michigan* IOWA* at Penn State* NEBRASKA* RUTGERS* at Michigan State* at Wisconsin* PENN STATE* INDIANA* at Northwestern* MINFG-A 3FG-A FT-A O-D-R PFA TOBLK STP 15 3-6 2-3 2-2 0-1-1 3 1 1 0 2 10 PAVLECHSeason/Career Highs SEASON HIGHS POINTS 10 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) REBOUNDS 1 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) FG MADE 3 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) FG ATT. 6 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 3 FG MADE 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 3 FG ATT. 3 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) FT MADE 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) FT ATT. 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) ASSISTS 1 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) BLOCKS STEALS 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) MINUTES 15 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) CAREER HIGHS 20 vs. #24 Miami (1/10/13) 5 vs. Boston College (2/3/13) 8 vs. #24 Miami (1/10/13) 11 vs. #24 Miami (1/10/13) 4 vs. Wake Forest (3/8/13) 6 (2X) last vs. #24 Miami (1/10/13) 6 vs. #11 UNC (1/24/13) 6 vs. #11 UNC (1/24/13) 8 (2X) last vs. Clemson (2/14/13) - 6 at Wake Forest (2/8/13) 42 vs. Wake Forest (3/8/13) PAVLECHCareer Statistics Season G-GS MP-MPG FG-FGAPCT. 3FG-FGAPCT. FT-FTAPCT. OFF DEFREB AVG PF-FOASTTOBLKSTL PTSAVG 2012-13 34-31 1026-30.2 72-182.396 32-86.364 12-17.706 939 481.4 53-0137 92 0 33 188 5.5 2013-14 17-3 143-8.4 11-31.355 4-20.200 3-5.600 3 9 120.7 11-0 12 4 0 3 29 1.7 2014-15 1-0 15-15.0 3-6 .500 2-3 .667 2-2 1.000 01 1 1.0 3-011 02 10 10.0 CAREER 52-34 1184-22.8 86-219.393 38-111.342 17-24.708 1249 611.2 67-0150 97 0 38 227 4.4 MARYLAND TERRAPINS: 2006 NCAA Champions • 2014 Final Four Page 19 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball #22 TierneyPFIRMAN Forward • 6-2 • Junior• 2V • Williamsport, Pa. (South Williamsport Jr/Sr HS) • Terrapin Classic All-Tournament Team (2013) • ACC Rookie of the Week (12/10/12) PFIRMAN14-15 Game-By-Game Frese on Pfirman: “All of us have OPPONENT seen what Tierney can do on the court when she’s healthy. She is a unique player with everything she brings- her vision, her passing, her size, her ability to score inside and out, as well as rebound. She has the tools to be really good. We’ve seen it in stretches and now we need it to become consistent. Tierney can make us a better basketball team.” 2014-15Season Added second career double-double in season opener vs. The Mount with 16 points, 11 rebounds, plus 2 assists and a steal (Nov. 14). BeforeMaryland No. 5 Forward in the 2012 class and No. 22 overall player, according to ESPN.com’s Hoop Gurlz rankings...earned a scouts grade of 95...scored 2,000 career points and broke the South scoring record late this past season before finishing with 2,309 career points, second in Lycoming County history...averaged 24 ppg, 13 rpg, and 3 apg as a senior...four-time Associated Press All-State honoree... two-time Williamsport Sun-Gazette Female Athlete of the Year ...ESPN Radio 104.1FM/1050AM Basketball Player of the Year in freshman, sophomore and junior seasons...made AP’s All-State Third Team as a freshman, Second Team as a sophomore and First Team as a junior...named the Williamsport Sun-Gazette Player of the Year as a sophomore and as a junior...First Team All-Conference in Heartland III ...coached by Mike Allison at South Williamsport...also played for the Lady Runnin’ Rebels, where she was coached by Bill McDonough. Personal Parents are Stephen and Kim Pfirman...father played football at Rutgers...graduated from high school with honors...finished 6th in the state in javelin in high school...loves to watch movies, spend time with family and go hunting...chose Maryland for the family atmosphere, distance to home, and she loved the staff and players...also considered Rutgers, Florida, NC State, Vanderbilt, Iowa State and Delaware...early childhood education major. MOUNT ST. MARY’S WAGNER SOUTH FLORIDA at George Washington LOYOLA vs. James Madison vs. Washington State at Notre Dame TOWSON AMERICAN at Coppin State OHIO STATE* at Nebraska* PURDUE* at Minnesota* at Rutgers* ILLINOIS* MICHIGAN STATE* at Indiana* at Michigan* IOWA* at Penn State* NEBRASKA* RUTGERS* at Michigan State* at Wisconsin* PENN STATE* INDIANA* at Northwestern* MINFG-A 3FG-A FT-A O-D-R PFA TOBLK STP 17 7-8 0-0 2-2 5-6-11 2 2 2 0 1 16 PFIRMANSeason/Career Highs POINTS REBOUNDS FG MADE FG ATT. 3 FG MADE 3 FG ATT. FT MADE FT ATT. ASSISTS BLOCKS STEALS MINUTES SEASON HIGHS 16 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 11 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 7 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 8 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 1 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 1 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 17 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) CAREER HIGHS 17 vs. Virginia (12/6/12) 11 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 7 (4X) last vs. The Mount (11/14/14) 18 vs. Virginia (12/6/12) 2 (2X) last vs. NC State (1/17/13) 8 vs. Virginia (12/6/12) 6 vs.Georgia Tech (1/19/14) 8 vs.Georgia Tech (1/19/14) 8 at Towson (12/11/12) 4 vs. Wofford (12/28/13) 4 at #19 Nebraska (11/28/12) 31 at Virginia Tech (1/13/13) PFIRMANCareer Statistics Season G-GS MP-MPG FG-FGAPCT. 3FG-FGAPCT. FT-FTAPCT. OFF DEFREB AVG PF-FOASTTOBLKSTL PTSAVG 2012-13 21-12 417-19.9 63-172.366 12-51.235 16-24.667 2654 803.8 27-04738 721 154 7.3 2013-14 34-0 452-13.3 77-163.472 0-4.000 20-32.625 50751253.7 37-03025 1217 174 5.1 2014-15 1-0 17-17.0 7-8 .875 0-0 .000 2-2 1.000 5611 11.0 2-022 01 16 16.0 CAREER 56-12 886-15.8 147-343.429 12-55.218 38-58.655 81 1352163.9 66-07965 1939 344 6.1 Page 20 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball Notes 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball #32 ShatoriWALKER-KIMBROUGH Guard • 5-11 • Sophomore• 1V • Aliquippa, Pa. (Hopewell High School) • ACC Rookie of the Week (12/29/13; 1/6/14) • Terrapin Classic All-Tournament Team (2013) SWK14-15 Game-By-Game Frese on SWK: “Shatori can be OPPONENT one of the best perimeter players we’ve had here at Maryland. She has all the tools and the drive to be great. Now it’s just a matter of mastering the game. It’s hard to not be really excited about Shatori’s future. I want to help her achieve all her dreams.” 2014-15Season Added 10 points with 2 steals in 15 minutes vs. The Mount in the season opener (Nov. 14). BeforeMaryland Ranked the No. 38 player by Blue Star Report...No. 6 wing and No. 43 overall player in the class of 2013, according to ESPN HoopGurlz recruit rankings...averaged 28.3 points, 10.1 rebounds and 6.8 steals as a senior in 2012-13 and owns school’s scoring record...named the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette’s Player of the Year as a junior and senior...named the overall Athlete of the Year by the Pittsburgh Tribune, Beaver County Times, and Pittsburgh Post-Gazette... Gatorade Player of the Year for the state of Pennsylvania as a senior...led her team to the WPIAL Championship and the Pennsylvania 3-A State Semifinals as a junior...in the four playoff games of the championship run, she averaged 31 points per game...in the championship game, she scored 35 of her team’s 50 points...named the WPIAL Girls Athlete of the Year as a junior...First Team All-State (Class AAA) in sophomore, junior and senior seasons...also played volleyball and helped team win a WPIAL championship as a junior and has been a First Team All-State selection all three years...competed in the triple jump for track team... finished third in the WPIAL as a sophomore and fourth as a junior...played for Jeff Homziak at Hopewell Area High School and Ron Mumbray with the Western Pennsylvania Bruins. Personal Shatori Walker-Kimbrough...parents are Angela Kimbrough and Vance Walker...knew she wanted to come to Maryland after an unofficial visit...letters and sciences major...wants to be successful and give back to the people that gave to her...three-sport athlete that had offers to play volleyball, run track and play basketball in college...recruited by Penn State volleyball and Notre Dame, Pitt and Duquesne for basketball. MOUNT ST. MARY’S WAGNER SOUTH FLORIDA at George Washington LOYOLA vs. James Madison vs. Washington State at Notre Dame TOWSON AMERICAN at Coppin State OHIO STATE* at Nebraska* PURDUE* at Minnesota* at Rutgers* ILLINOIS* MICHIGAN STATE* at Indiana* at Michigan* IOWA* at Penn State* NEBRASKA* RUTGERS* at Michigan State* at Wisconsin* PENN STATE* INDIANA* at Northwestern* MINFG-A 3FG-A FT-A O-D-R PFA TOBLK STP 15* 3-5 0-0 4-4 1-0-1 2 0 3 0 2 10 SWKSeason/Career Highs POINTS REBOUNDS FG MADE FG ATT. 3 FG MADE 3 FG ATT. FT MADE FT ATT. ASSISTS BLOCKS STEALS MINUTES SEASON HIGHS 10 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 1 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 3 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 5 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 4 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 4 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 15 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) CAREER HIGHS 17 (3X) last at Syracuse (2/2/14) 7 (3X) last at Syracuse (2/2/14) 7 (3X) last at Syracuse (2/2/14) 13 vs. Syracuse (1/16/14) 4 vs. Wofford (12/28/13) 6 vs. Wake Forest (1/9/14) 5 vs. Charleston (12/29/13) 8 vs. Virginia Tech (3/2/14) 4 (4X) last at #10 UNC (1/5/14) 2 vs. Clemson (2/9/14) 3 (5X) last vs. #3 Tennessee (3/30/14) 29 vs. Syracuse (1/16/14) SWKMiscellaneous Stats CATEGORY Double-Figure Scoring 5+ rebounds Games with a three SEASONCAREER 1 20 5 14 LAST TIME 10 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 6 at Boston College (2/27/14) 1 at Miami (2/13/14) SWKCareer Statistics Season G-GS MP-MPG FG-FGAPCT. 3FG-FGAPCT. FT-FTAPCT. OFF DEFREB AVG PF-FOASTTOBLKSTL PTSAVG 2013-14 35-0 606-17.3 122-255.478 23-58.397 59-77.766 43581012.9 54-05448 842 326 9.3 2014-15 1-1 15-15.0 3-5 .600 0-0 .000 4-4 1.000 10 1 1.0 2-003 02 10 10.0 CAREER 36-1 621-17.3 125-260.481 23-58.397 63-81.778 44581022.8 56-05451 844 336 9.3 MARYLAND TERRAPINS: 2006 NCAA Champions • 2014 Final Four Page 21 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball #33 A’LexusHARRISON Forward • 6-0 • Redshirt Freshman • HS • Baltimore, Md. (Digital Harbor High School) Frese on Harrison: “A’Lexus has athletic gifts that few other young women possess. With our ability to develop players, she has a chance to become a really unique player in the women’s game one day.” 2014-15Season Sat out first game vs. Mount St. Mary’s witha foot injury (Nov. 14). BeforeMaryland The No. 28 player in Blue Star Report’s rankings...ranked No. 70 overall player and No. 18 forward in the class of 2013, according to ESPN’s HoopGurlz....four year starter at Digital Harbor and that became a double-double machine ...averaged 14 points and 13 rebounds as a senior, amassing 1,465 career points, 1,300 rebounds, 565 assists and 245 blocks...led Rams to Baltimore City Division I title as a senior in 2012-13...named to the Baltimore Sun’s First Team All-Metro as a Junior and Senior and Second Team as a sophomore...as a junior, became the second player in school history to break the 1100-point mark and 1000-rebound plateau...has grabbed 20 or more rebounds in seven games and career high is 25...helped lead her team to back to back state Final Fours as a freshman and a sophomore, despite losing talented seniors...played for Patrick McDonald at Digital Harbor. Personal A’Lexus Harrison...daughter of Kim and Quann Harrison...has one brother, Quann Harrison, Jr....father, Quann, played football at Towson...mother, Kim, played basketball at Miami and then played overseas...was invited to the White House with the Super Bowl champion Baltimore Ravens...grew up playing football for her local recreation league... played quarterback...chose Maryland because it was her dream school since she was 12... also considered West Virginia, Miami and Rutgers...communications major that wants to be a sports broadcaster one day. HARRISON14-15 Game-By-Game OPPONENT MOUNT ST. MARY’S WAGNER SOUTH FLORIDA at George Washington LOYOLA vs. James Madison vs. Washington State at Notre Dame TOWSON AMERICAN at Coppin State OHIO STATE* at Nebraska* PURDUE* at Minnesota* at Rutgers* ILLINOIS* MICHIGAN STATE* at Indiana* at Michigan* IOWA* at Penn State* NEBRASKA* RUTGERS* at Michigan State* at Wisconsin* PENN STATE* INDIANA* at Northwestern* MINFG-A 3FG-A FT-A O-D-R PFA TOBLK STP DNP HARRISONSeason/Career Highs SEASON HIGHS POINTS REBOUNDS FG MADE FG ATT. 3 FG MADE 3 FG ATT. FT MADE FT ATT. ASSISTS BLOCKS STEALS MINUTES CAREER HIGHS HARRISONCareer Statistics Season 2013-14 2014-15 Page 22 G-GS MP-MPG FG-FGAPCT. 3FG-FGAPCT. FT-FTAPCT. OFF DEFREB AVG PF-FOASTTOBLKSTL PTSAVG REDSHIRT SEASON 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball Notes 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball #42 BrionnaJONES Center • 6-3 • Sophomore • 1V • Havre de Grace, Md. (Aberdeen High School) Frese on Jones: “Bri is everything a coach could want and we are incredibly proud of how much she achieved last season. And it’s just the beginning, because she has a chance to have a really terrific career here. She is a force around the basket and has a pair of the best hands you’ll see. She also is an outstanding student. She’s a great example of a great family raising a great young lady.” 2014-15Season Added 10 points with 5 boards, 4 blocks and 2 steals in season opener vs. The Mount (Nov. 14). BeforeMaryland Ranked No. 48 player overall by Blue Star Report...the No. 7 post player and No. 55 overall player in ESPN HoopGurlz’s recruit rankings...averaged 23.5 points per game, 11.6 rebounds and 4.2 blocks per game through her junior season...tore her right ACL in January of her season...led team to 3A state championship as a junior...named Baltimore Sun All-Metro Player of the Year as a junior...named First Team All-Metro by The Sun as a sophomore and a junior...in regional championship game her junior year, scored a career-high 40 points... scored 25 points and 13 rebounds in 2012 state championship victory...695hoops Player of the Year as a sophomore and a junior...helped lead AAU Team, Fairfax Stars, to the Chicago Tournament of Champions Elite 8, USJN Final Four and Nike National Silver Bracket Final Four in 2012...attended the Nike Skills Academy in 2011 and 2012 and was name one of top five post players...team won Chicago Tournament of Champions in 2011...also played volleyball... played for Stacy Liles at Aberdeen High School and Aggie McCormick-Dix on the Fairfax Stars. Personal Brionna Jones...daughter of Michael and Sanciarhea Jones...has three siblings - Jarred, Stephanie and Jordan...mother played college volleyball at East Texas State, father played college basketball at Hartford and brother, Jarred, plays college basketball at Loyola (Md.)...came to Maryland because she loved the campus and the coaches and players made her feel like she could help them accomplish great things...also considered Virginia, Georgetown, South Carolina and Delaware...kinesiology major...wants to be a pediatrician. JONES14-15 Game-By-Game OPPONENT MOUNT ST. MARY’S WAGNER SOUTH FLORIDA at George Washington LOYOLA vs. James Madison vs. Washington State at Notre Dame TOWSON AMERICAN at Coppin State OHIO STATE* at Nebraska* PURDUE* at Minnesota* at Rutgers* ILLINOIS* MICHIGAN STATE* at Indiana* at Michigan* IOWA* at Penn State* NEBRASKA* RUTGERS* at Michigan State* at Wisconsin* PENN STATE* INDIANA* at Northwestern* MINFG-A 3FG-A FT-A O-D-R PFA TOBLK STP 16* 5-7 0-0 0-1 1-4-5 4 0 1 4 3 10 JONESSeason/Career Highs SEASON HIGHS POINTS 10 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) REBOUNDS 5 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) FG MADE 5 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) FG ATT. 7 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 3 FG MADE 3 FG ATT. FT MADE FT ATT. 1 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) ASSISTS BLOCKS 4 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) STEALS 2 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) MINUTES 16 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) CAREER HIGHS 18 vs. Syracuse (1/16/14) 11 vs. DSU (12/14/13) 7 (2X) last vs. #2 Notre Dame (4/6/14) 14 vs. Clemson (2/9/14) 6 vs. Syracuse (1/16/14) 7 vs. Syracuse (1/16/14) 2 (3X) last at Georgia Tech (2/23/14) 4 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 3 vs. Clemson (2/9/14) 29 at Georgia Tech (2/23/14) JONESMiscellaneous Stats CATEGORY Double-Figure Scoring 10-plus rebounds Double-Doubles SEASONCAREER LAST TIME 1 11 10 vs. Mount St. Mary’s (11/14/14) 2 10 vs. Syracuse (1/16/14) 1 18 pts, 10 rebs vs. Syracuse (1/16/14) JONESCareer Statistics Season G-GS MP-MPG FG-FGAPCT. 3FG-FGAPCT. FT-FTAPCT. OFF DEFREB AVG PF-FOASTTOBLKSTL PTSAVG 2013-14 35-14 566-16.2 102-168.607 0-0.000 36-65.554 54 1051594.5 70-21241 1823 240 6.9 2014-15 1-1 16-16.0 5-7 .714 0-0 .000 0-1 .000 14 5 5.0 4-001 43 10 10.0 CAREER 36-15 582-16.2 107-175.611 0-0.000 36-66.545 55 1091644.6 74-21242 2226 250 6.9 MARYLAND TERRAPINS: 2006 NCAA Champions • 2014 Final Four Page 23 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball 0 4 22 AJA ELLISON F • 6-3 • Fr.-HS Burlington, N.J. Life Center Academy LEXIE BROWN G • 5-9 • So.-1V Suwanee, Ga. North Gwinnett High School TIERNEY PFIRMAN F • 6-2 • Jr.-2V Williamsport, Pa. South Williamsport Jr./Sr. High School Brenda Frese Head Coach Arizona ‘93 13th year at Maryland 16th year overall 1 LAURIN MINCY G • 6-0 • R-Sr.-3V Newark, N.J. University High School 5 32 MALINA HOWARD C • 6-4 • Jr.-2V Twinsburg, Ohio Twinsburg High School SHATORI WALKERKIMBROUGH G • 5-11 • So.-1V Aliquippa, Pa. Hopewell High School Tina Langley Associate Head Coach West Alabama ‘96 Seventh year at Maryland 17th year overall 2 12 33 KIARA LESLIE G • 6-0 • Fr.-HS Holly Springs, N.C. Holly Springs High School KRISTEN CONFROY G • 5-8 • Fr.-HS Solon, Ohio Solon High School A’LEXUS HARRISON Marlin Chinn Assistant Coach Hampton ‘92 Sixth year at Maryland 17th year overall F • 6-0 • R-Fr.-HS Baltimore, Md. Digital Harbor High School 3 15 42 Shay Robinson Assistant Coach Central Florida ‘07 First year at Maryland Fourth year overall BRENE MOSELEY G • 5-7 • R-Jr.-2V Burtonsville, Md. Paint Branch High School CHLOE PAVLECH G • 5-9 • Jr.-2V Cincinnati, Ohio Sycamore High School BRIONNA JONES C • 6-3 • So.-1V Havre de Grace, Md. Aberdeen High School Libby Ellis Director of Operations Maryland ‘12 Second year at Maryland Second year overall 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball MediaSERVICES Contacts and Interviews Contact Rose DiPaula, assistant media relations director, for weekly interviews or information regarding Maryland basketball. Practices are open to the media. Contact the Maryland media relations office for weekly schedules or other media needs. No interviews shall be granted on game days, until a postgame press conference. Media Relations Office – (301) 314-7064 Media Relations Fax – (301) 314-9094 DiPaula’s Office line – (301) 314-7063 DiPaula’s cell - (443) 417-5266 DiPaula’s email – [email protected] MediaRelations schedules, scores and recaps, season statistics and game notes are all available. Be sure to check out the Terps’ own website, MarylandWomensBasketball.com for the latest episodes of Under the Shell and exclusive content. Under the Shell Under the Shell is a reality show featuring the Maryland women’s basketball team. It airs for 10 weeks throughout the season on Comcast SportsNet. The 30-minute reality show gives fans and viewers and in-depth look behind the scenes with the Terps. It airs at 10 a.m. every other Sunday on Comcast Sports Net. All of the previous 10 seasons are available on the women’s basketball YouTube channel. GAMEDAY Gameday Media Parking Parking is free and open after 4 p.m. in the lots surrounding the Comcast Center on gamedays. For other arrangements, please contact the media relations office. Media Seating and Media Work Room The courtside media area and work room both are at the northeast corner of the arena. Both are available for working media only. Seats in both are open. Located on the court level of Comcast Center, the work room is directly across from the men’s basketball locker room and directly behind the courtside area. They are connected by the tunnel area adjacent to the loading dock and service entrance on the arena’s northeast corner. The work room opens well before game time and media representatives are welcome upon arrival at the arena. Rose DiPaula Assistant Director of Media Relations Women’s Basketball Contact Office: 301-314-7063 Cell: 443-417-5266 Fax: 301-314-9094 [email protected] www.twitter.com/dipaularose Other Info Athletics Media Relations 2731 Comcast Center University of Maryland College Park, MD 20742 www.umterps.com Press Row Phone: 301-314-8624 POSTGAME Postgame News Conference Head coach Brenda Frese and select players will be available for interviews in a press conference in the media work room. The Maryland locker room is closed. The visiting team’s locker room access policy is determined by officials of that school. Upon request, visiting players and coaches can come to the media work room as well. Maryland News & Notes by E-Mail Basketball news and releases from the Maryland athletic media relations office may be obtained instantly via email by contacting ROSE DIPAULA at [email protected]. List TERP NEWS in the subject heading, and include the name of your media outlet and phone number in your message. Maryland on the Internet All the latest Maryland women’s basketball news is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week by accessing umterps.com. Player/coach biographies, MARYLAND TERRAPINS: 2006 NCAA Champions • 2014 Final Four Page 25 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball 2013-14 SeasonRESULTS RECORD: OVERALLHOME AWAY NEUTRAL ALL GAMES 1-0 1-0 B1G GAMES NON-CONFERENCE1-01-0 MD DATE TIME RANK OPPONENT 11/14/14 11:00 10/8 MOUNT ST. MARY’S OPP RANK -- RESULT W, 109-49 ATTEND 4,177 HIGH POINTS Pfirman, Leslie (16) HIGH REBS Pfirman (11) HIGH ASTS Confroy (7) All Times Eastern Rankings listed as AP/Coaches %-San Juan Shootout (Guaynabo, Puerto Rico) $-Big Ten/ACC Challenge &-Terrapin Classic *-B1G game ^-B1G Tournament ^^-NCAA Tournament Page 26 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball Notes 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball Career Record Book UPDATE Points (1,000 or more) Rk. PTS 1. 2,356 2. 2,247 3. 2,205 4. 2,078 5. 1,928 6. 1,878 7. 1,679 8. 1,630 9. 1,621 10.1,601 11.1,595 12.1,541 13.1,512 14.1,450 15.1,425 Player (Years) Alyssa Thomas (2010-14) Crystal Langhorne (2005-08) Marissa Coleman (2006-09) Kristi Toliver (06-09) Vicky Bullett (1986-89) Shay Doron (2004-07) Christy Winters (1987-90) Marcia Richardson (1979-84) Lynetta Kizer (2008-12) Jessie Hicks (1990-93) Tianna Hawkins (2009-13) Deanna Tate (1986-89) Deedee Warley (1999-02) Marche Strickland (1999-02) Kris Kirchner (1978-80) Rebounds Rk. RBS 1. 1,235 2. 1,229 3. 1,139 4. 1,086 5. 968 6. 958 7. 936 8. 873 9. 816 10. 782 11. 723 12. 716 13. 703 703 15. 690 16. 681 17. 672 18. 668 19. 609 Player (Years) Alyssa Thomas (2010-14) Crystal Langhorne (2005-08) Marissa Coleman (2006-09) Tianna Hawkins (2009-13) Vicky Bullett (1986-89) Lynetta Kizer (2009-12) Kris Kirchner (1978-80) Laura Harper (2005-08) Alicia DeVaughn (2010-14) Myra Waters (1979-82) Christy Winters (1987-90) Stephanie Cross (1995-98) Jessie Hicks (1990-93) Chequita Wood (1983-86) Deedee Warley (1999-02) Subrena Rivers (1986-90) Bonnie Rimkus (1991-94) Debbie Lytle (1980-83) Jade Perry (2005-08) Assists (300 or more) Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. ATS 751 583 504 500 488 486 453 439 416 411 406 402 383 381 371 364 354 Steals Rk. 1. 2. 3. ST 315 309 293 Player (Years) Kristi Toliver (2006-09) Debbie Lytle (1980-83) Tara Heiss (1975-78) Deanna Tate (1986-89) Alyssa Thomas (2010-14) Anjale Barrett (2008-12) Marissa Coleman (2006-09) Carla Holmes (1988-91) Anesia Smith (2002-05) Shay Doron (2004-07) Subrena Rivers (1986-90) Marcia Richardson (1982-84) Lisa Brown (1985-88) Tiffany Brown (1997-00) Sonia Chase (1995-98) Vicki Brick (2000, 02-04) Terri Daniels (2000-03) Player (Years) Debbie Lytle (1980-83) Sonia Chase (1995-98) Deanna Tate (1986-89) 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 266 241 238 236 225 223 220 212 205 190 188 182 172 Renneika Razor (2000-03) Myra Waters (1979-82) Alyssa Thomas (2010-14) Chequita Wood (1983-86) Vicki Brick (2000, 02-04) Shay Doron (2004-07) Vicky Bullett (1986-89) Lisa Brown (1985-88) Marissa Coleman (2006-09) Tiffany Brown (1997-00) Stephanie Cross (1995-98) Marcia Richardson (1981-84) Anesia Smith (2002-05) Blocked Shots Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 16. 18. 19. 21. B 198 186 170 141 137 129 117 97 91 86 79 75 74 71 71 66 65 62 58 55 Player (Years) Laura Harper (2005-08) Kris Kirchner (1978-80) Vicky Bullett (1986-89) Marissa Coleman (2006-09) Jessie Hicks (1990-93) Alicia DeVaughn (2010-14) Tianna Hawkins (2009-13) Krystal Kimrey (1977-80) Christy Winters (1987-90) Chequita Wood (1983-86) Diandra Tchatchouang (2009-11) Lynetta Kizer (2008-12) Debbie Lytle (1980-83) Crystal Washington (2001-04) Rosita Melbourne (1999-02) Myra Waters (1979-82) Carolin Dehn-Duhr (1985-87) Bonnie Rimkus (1991-94) Alyssa Thomas (2010-14) Deedee Warley (1999-02) Field Goals Made Rk. FGM 1. 890 2. 889 3. 816 4. 776 5. 708 6. 703 7. 693 8. 670 9. 649 10. 621 11. 618 618 13. 593 14. 592 15. 581 16. 571 17. 569 18. 563 Player (Years) Alyssa Thomas (2010-14) Crystal Langhorne (2005-08) Vicky Bullett (1986-89) Marissa Coleman (2006-09) Kristi Toliver (2006-09) Christy Winters (1987-90) Marcia Richardson (1981-84) Tianna Hawkins (2009-13) Jessie Hicks (1990-93) Jasmina Perazic (1980-83) Shay Doron (2004-07) Deanna Tate (1986-89) Lynetta Kizer (2008-12) Chequita Wood (1983-86) Myra Waters (1979-82) Tara Heiss (1975-78) Kris Kirchner (1978-80) Deedee Warley (1999-02) Field Goal Percentage min. 500 attempts/ 2 years Rk.FG% Player (Years) 1. .662 Crystal Langhorne (2005-08) 2. .588 Jessie Hicks (1990-93) 3. .574 Tianna Hawkins (2009-13) 4. .571 Kalisa Davis (1995-98) 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. .568 .565 .563 .556 .543 540 .539 .537 .536 .529 .526 .515 .509 Dafne Lee (1989-92) Laura Harper (2005-08) Vicky Bullett (1986-89) Alicia DeVaughn (2010-14) Jasmina Perazic (1980-83) Myra Waters (1979-82) Branka Bogunovic (1997-00) Christy Winters (1987-90) Deanna Tate (1986-89) Chequita Wood (1983-86) Marcia Richardson (1981-84) Jane Zivalich (1976-79) Betsy Bailey (1978-79) 3-Point Field Goals Made Rk. FGM 1. 300 2. 172 172 4. 167 5. 150 6. 127 7. 124 8. 121 9. 111 10. 101 11. 96 12. 85 13. 80 14. 76 15. 75 16. 67 17. 53 18. 46 46 20. 39 21. 38 22. 33 23. 32 Player (Years) Kristi Toliver (2006-09) Marissa Coleman (2006-09) Tiffany Brown (1997-00) Marche Strickland (1999-02) Shay Doron (2004-07) Katie Rutan (2013-14) Ashleigh Newman (2005-08) Kim Rodgers (2008-12) Marah Strickland (2008-09) Terri Daniels (2000-03) LAURIN MINCY (2010-pres.) Lori Bjork (2010) Chrissy Fisher (2003-04) Anjale Barrett (2008-12) Carla Holmes (1989-91) Kelley Gibson (1995-99) LEXIE BROWN (2013-pres.) BRENE MOSELEY (2011-pres.) Diandra Tchatchouang (2009-10) Lillian Purvis (1995-97) CHLOE PAVLECH (2012-pres.) Alli Spence (2004) Limor Mizarachi (1992) 3-Point Field Goal Percentage min. 50 attempts/ 2 years Rk.FG% Player (Years) 1. .408 Kristi Toliver (2006-09) 2. .401 Katie Rutan (2013-14) 3. .397 S. WALKER-KIMBROUGH (13-pres.) 4. .394 Kim Bretz (1996-97) 5. .391 Marah Strickland (2008-09) 6. .388 Marissa Coleman (2006-09) 7. .378 Anjale Barrett (2008-12) 8. .377 Carla Holmes (1989-91) 9. .374 BRENE MOSELEY (2011-pres.) 10. .368 LEXIE BROWN (2013-pres.) 11. .360 Chrissy Fisher (2003-04) 12. .353 Lisa Brown (1985-89) 13. .352 Terri Daniels (2000-03) 14. .347 Marche Strickland (1999-02) Free Throws Made Rk. FTM 1. 557 2. 492 3. 481 4. 469 5. 411 MARYLAND TERRAPINS: 2006 NCAA Champions • 2014 Final Four Player (Years) Alyssa Thomas (2010-14) Shay Doron (2004-07) Marissa Coleman (2006-09) Crystal Langhorne (2005-08) Lynetta Kizer (2008-12) 6. 8. 9. 10. 11. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 386 386 362 303 296 287 287 278 273 264 261 256 247 Laura Harper (2005-08) Deedee Warley (1999-02) Kristi Toliver (2006-09) Jessie Hicks (1990-93) Vicky Bullett (1986-89) Kris Kirchner (1978-80) Deanna Tate (1986-89) Renneika Razor (2000-03) Christy Winters (1987-90) Alicia DeVaughn (2010-14) Myra Waters (1979-82) Sonia Chase (1995-98) Debbie Lytle (1980-83) Free Throws Attempted Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7 . 8. 10. FTA 747 720 613 594 587 566 543 500 500 418 418 Player (Years) Crystal Langhorne (2005-08) Alyssa Thomas (2010-14) Shay Doron (2004-07) Marissa Coleman (2006-09) Lynetta Kizer (2008-12) Laura Harper (2005-08) Deedee Warley (1999-02) Renneika Razor (2000-03) Jessie Hicks (1990-93) Kristi Toliver (2006-09) Kris Kirchner (1978-80) Free Throw Percentage min. 200 attempts Rk. FT% Player (Years) 1. .866 Kristi Toliver (2006-09) 2. .810 Marissa Coleman (2006-09) 3. .804 Marche Strickland (1999-02) 4. .803 Shay Doron (2004-07) 5. .793 LAURIN MINCY (2010-pres.) 6. .774 Alyssa Thomas (2010-14) 7. .721 Lisa Brown (1985-88) 8. .770 Marcia Richardson (1981-84) 9. .757 Deanna Tate (1986-89) 10. .752 Jasmina Perazic (1980-83) 11. .749 Michele Andrew (1992-94) 12. .736 Malissa Boles (1992-93) 13 .735 Myra Waters (1979-82) 14. .728 Jade Perry (2005-08) 15. .726 Jane Zivalich (1976-79) 16. .725 Vicky Bullett (1986-89) 17. .720 Tianna Hawkins (2009-13) 18. .711 Deedee Warley (1999-02) Games Played Rk. 1. 2. 3. 5. 7. 8. GP 144 141 139 139 137 137 136 135 135 135 Player (Years) Marissa Coleman (2006-09) Ashleigh Newman (2005-08) Jade Perry (2005-08) Kristi Toliver (2006-09) Alicia DeVaughn (2010-14) Anjale Barrett (2008-12) Tianna Hawkins (2009-13) Alyssa Thomas (2010-14) Lynetta Kizer (2008-12) Crystal Langhorne (2005-08) Games Started Rk. GS Player (Years) 1. 135 Alyssa Thomas (2010-14) 2. 134 Crystal Langhorne (2005-08) Page 27 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball Season Record Book UPDATE Points Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. PTS 686 665 654 653 645 651 633 631 627 613 601 594 581 562 549 536 Player (Year) Vicky Bullett (1988-89) Alyssa Thomas (2013-14) Crystal Langhorne (2005-06) Marissa Coleman (2008-09) Kristi Toliver (2008-09) Alyssa Thomas (2012-13) Deanna Tate (1988-89) Kristi Toliver (2007-08) Kris Kirchner (1979-80) Tianna Hawkins (2012-13) Alyssa Thomas (2011-12) Marissa Coleman (2007-08) Vicky Bullett (1987-88) Shay Doron (2004-05) Crystal Langhorne (2004-05) Crystal Langhorne (2007-08) Rebounds Rk. RBS 1. 381 2. 362 3. 349 4. 340 5. 331 6. 326 7. 325 325 9. 316 10. 313 11. 309 12. 303 13. 299 14. 290 15. 287 16. 282 17. 279 18. 275 19. 274 20. 266 21. 258 258 23. 256 256 Player (Year) Alyssa Thomas (2013-14) Kris Kirchner (1979-80) Alyssa Thomas (2012-13) Crystal Langhorne (2004-05) Tianna Hawkins (2012-13) Tianna Hawkins (2011-12) Demauria Liles (2008-09) Crystal Langhorne (2005-06) Kris Kirchner (1977-78) Laura Harper (2007-08) Marissa Coleman (2005-06) Vicky Bullett (1987-88) Marissa Coleman (2005-06) Crystal Langhorne (2007-08) Vicky Bullett (1988-89) Bonnie Rimkus (1993-94) Alyssa Thomas (2011-12) Marissa Coleman (2007-08) Crystal Langhorne (2006-07) Lynetta Kizer (2009-10) Laura Harper (2005-06) Kris Kirchner (1978-79) Tianna Hawkins (2009-10) Marissa Coleman (2006-07) Assists Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. ATS 275 249 217 214 183 181 177 177 171 170 161 158 157 150 149 148 148 Page 28 Player (Year) Kristi Toliver (2007-08) Tara Heiss (1977-78) Deanna Tate (1988-89) Anesia Smith (2004-05) Debbie Lytle (1981-82) Alyssa Thomas (2012-13) Anjale Barrett (2011-12) Deanna Tate (1987-88) Dara Taylor (2009-10) Kristi Toliver (2008-09) Kristi Toliver (2006-07) Carla Holmes (1988-89) Debbie Lytle (1979-80) Debbie Lytle (1982-83) Shay Doron (2005-06) Lisa Brown (1987-88) Karon Ferguson (1993-94) 18. 19. 20. 21. 147 145 144 142 LEXIE BROWN (2013-14) Kristi Toliver (2005-06) Alyssa Thomas (2013-14) Subrena Rivers (1989-90) Steals Rk. ST Player (Year) 1. 126 Deanna Tate (1988-89) 2. 95 Vicki Brick (1999-00) 3. 90 Sonia Chase (1994-05) 4. 89 Debbie Lytle (1981-82) 89 Deanna Tate (1987-88) 89 Sonia Chase (1997-98) 7. 87 Renneika Razor (2002-03) 8. 86 Debbie Lytle (1979-80) 9. 80 Chequita Wood (1983-84) 10. 78 Deanna Tate (1986-86) 11. 77 Myra Waters (1979-80) 12. 73 Myra Waters (1980-81) 73 Debbie Lytle (1980-81) 14. 72 Vicky Bullett (1988-89) 15. 71 Vicky Bullett (1987-88) Blocked Shots Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 11. 13. 14. 15 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. B 80 70 65 59 54 52 48 47 47 47 46 46 45 44 41 40 39 36 35 34 33 33 Player (Year) Kris Kirchner (1978-79) Laura Harper (2005-06) Laura Harper (2006-07) Kris Kirchner (1979-80) Vicky Bullett (1986-87) Marissa Coleman (2005-06) Laura Harper (2007-08) Kris Kirchner (1977-78) Jessie Hicks (1992-93) Jessie Hicks (1991-92) Demauria Liles (2998-09) Vicky Bullett (1988-89) Alicia DeVaughn (2011-12) Diandra Tchatchouang (2009-10) Vicky Bullett (1987-88) Crystal Washington (2003-04) Tianna Hawkins (2011-12) Alicia DeVaughn (2010-11) Diandra Tchatchouang (2010-11) Caroline Dehn-Duhr (1984-85) Tianna Hawkins (2009-10) Christy Winters (1986-87) Field Goal Percentage min. 200 attempts Rk.FG% Player (Year) 1. .707 Crystal Langhorne (2006-07) 2. .670 Crystal Langhorne (2005-06) 3. .647 Crystal Langhorne (2007-08) 4. .633 Jessie Hicks (1992-93) 5. .623 Tianna Hawkins (2011-12) 6. .603 Laura Harper (2007-08) .603 Kalisa Davis (1997-98( 8. .602 Vicky Bullett (1987-88) 9. .598 Jessie Hicks (1990-91) 10. .596 Branka Bogunovic (1998-99) 11. .592 Crystal Langhorne (2004-05) 12. .591 Jessie Hicks (1991-92) 13. .588 Christy Winters (1987-88) 14. .587 Kalisa Davis (1996-97) 15. .578 Dafne Lee (1990-91) 16. .577 Lea Hakala (1982-83) .577 Chequita Wood (1983-84 Field Goals Made Rk. FGM 1. 289 2. 268 3. 257 257 5. 248 6. 246 7. 243 8. 233 9. 232 10. 229 11. 226 12. 224 13. 220 14. 218 15. 216 16. 215 215 215 Player (Year) Vicky Bullett (1988-89) Deanna Tate (1988-89) Alyssa Thomas (2013-14) Tianna Hawkins (2012-13) Crystal Langhorne (2005-06) Kris Kirchner (1979-80) Vicky Bullett (1987-88) Alyssa Thomas (2011-12) Marissa Coleman (2008-09) Alyssa Thomas (2012-13) Jasmina Perazic (1982-83) Marcia Richardson (1983-84) Kristi Toliver (2008-09) Lisa Brown (1987-88) Christy Winters (1989-90) Crystal Langhorne (2006-07) Crystal Langhorne (2004-05) Chequita Wood (1983-84) 3-Point Field Goal Percentage min. 50 attempts Rk.FG% Player (Year) 1. .500 Alli Spence (2003-04) 2. .481 Terri Daniels (2000-01) 3. .470 Marissa Coleman (2005-06) 4. .447 Kristi Toliver (2006-07) 5. .431 Katie Rutan (2013-14) 6. .424 Carla Holmes (1988-89) 7. .416 Kristi Toliver (2008-09) .416 Limor Mizrachi (1991-92) 9. .409 Lori Bjork (2009-10) 10. .407 Marah Strickland (2007-08) 11. .405 BRENE MOSELEY (2011-12) 12. .404 Kristi Toliver (2005-06) .404 Marche Strickland (1999-00) 14. .400 LAURIN MINCY (2011-12) 15. .397 S. WALKER-KIMBROUGH (2013-14) 16. .396 Terri Bradley (1989-90) 17. .384 Shay Doron (2005-06) 18. .382 Chrissy Fisher (2002-03) 19. .378 Katie Rutan (2012-13) .378 Marissa Coleman (2008-09) 21. .375 Marah Strickland (2008-09) 22. .371 Kristi Toliver (2007-08) 23. .367 LEXIE BROWN (2013-14) .367 Carla Holmes (1987-88) 3-Point Field Goals Made Rk. FGM 1. 91 2. 85 3. 78 4. 72 5. 69 6. 68 7. 59 59 59 10. 57 Player (Year) Kristi Toliver (2008-09) Lori Bjork (2009-10) Kristi Toliver (2007-08) Kristi Toliver (2006-07) Tiffany Brown (1999-00) Katie Rutan (2012-13) Katie Rutan (2013-14) Kristi Toliver (2005-06) Marche Strickland (1999-00) Marah Strickland (2007-08) 11. 12. 15. 16. 17. 18. 20. 22. 56 54 54 54 52 51 48 47 47 46 46 42 42 Shay Doron (2005-06) LAURIN MINCY (2011-12) Marah Strickland (2008-09) Marissa Coleman (2005-06) Marche Strickland (2001-02) LEXIE BROWN (2013-14) Tiffany Brown (1996-97) Ashleigh Newman (2005-06) Marche Strickland (2000-01) Kim Rodgers (2009-10) Marissa Coleman (2007-08) Terri Daniels (2002-03) Chrissy Fisher (2002-03) Free Throw Percentage min. 50 attempts Rk. FT% Player (Year) 1. .891 Kristi Toliver (2005-06) 2. .877 Kristi Toliver (2006-07) 3. .865 Lori Bjork (2009-10) 4. .860 Kristi Toliver (2007-08) .860 Jasmina Perazic (1981-82) 6. .857 Kristi Toliver (2008-09) .857 Marche Strickland (2000-01) 8. .839 Marche Strickland (1998-99) 9. .833 Marissa Coleman (2005-06) .828 Shay Doron (2005-06) 11. .826 Shay Doron (2006-07) 12. .824 Limor Mizrachi (1991-92) 13. .817 Jade Perry (2006-07) 14. .816 Marcia Richardson (1981-82) 15. .810 Marissa Coleman (2007-08) 16. .809 LAURIN MINCY (2011-12) 17. .802 Marissa Coleman (2006-07) 18..800Alyssa Thomas (2011-12) .800 Jane Zivalich (1977-78) Free Throws Made Rk. FTM Player (Year) 1. 176 Alyssa Thomas (2012-13) 2. 166 Marissa Coleman (2007-08) 3. 158 Crystal Langhorne (2005-06) 4. 157 Laura Harper (2007-08) 5. 152 Marissa Coleman (2008-09) 6. 145 Alyssa Thomas (2013-14) 145 Shay Doron (2004-05) 8. 141 Kristi Toliver (2007-08) 9. 136 Shay Doron (2003-04) 10. 135 Shay Doron (2005-06) 135 Kris Kirchner (1979-80) 12.128Alyssa Thomas (2011-12) 13. 125 Laura Harper (2005-06) 14. 119 Crystal Langhorne (2004-05) 119 Jessie Hicks (1992-93) 16. 115 Deedee Warley (1999-00) 17. 114 Lynetta Kizer (2010-11) 114 Crystal Langhorne (2007-08) 19.108Alyssa Thomas (2010-11) 108 Vicky Bullett (1988-89) 21. 107 Deedee Warley (2000-01) 22. 106 LAURIN MINCY (2011-12) Free Throws Attempted Rk. 1. 2. FTA 230 228 228 Player (Year) Alyssa Thomas (2012-13) Laura Harper (2007-08) Crystal Langhorne (2005-06) 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball Notes 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball 1: MOUNT ST. MARY’S Official Basketball Box Score -- Game Totals -- Final Statistics Mount St. Mary's vs Maryland 11/14/14 11:00 a.m. at College Park, Md. (XFINITY Center) Mount St. Mary's 45 • 0-1 ## 45 12 21 24 42 03 11 13 22 25 32 44 Total 3-Ptr Rebounds FG-FGA FG-FGA FT-FTA Off Def Tot PF Player EISENHARD, Kaitlyn BATES, Kayla CHICKEY, Jody BREWER, Jacqueline CARNEY, Jenn BELANGER-FINN, K. DICKSON, Katrice KOUTRIS, Stacey BUZAID, Jackie HARRIS, Jessica HUMMELL, Caroline ARTHUR-WILLIAMS, S. Team Totals FG % 1st Half: 9-30 3FG % 1st Half: 3-9 FT % 1st Half: 4-7 30.0% 33.3% 57.1% c g g g g 1-6 0-1 2-8 4-12 3-7 0-2 1-4 0-0 0-1 2-5 0-0 2-5 0-0 0-1 0-1 1-4 2-5 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1 2-2 0-0 0-0 15-51 2nd half: 2nd half: 2nd half: 5-14 6-21 2-5 6-13 TP 1-2 0-0 1-2 3-4 2-2 0-0 1-2 1-2 0-0 0-0 0-2 1-4 6 4 10 4 0 3 3 0 1 1 2 2 0 1 1 1 1 3 4 3 0 1 1 3 0 3 3 1 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 1 0 1 2 0 0 0 2 1 1 2 10-20 12 18 30 20 28.6% 40.0% 46.2% 3 0 5 12 10 0 3 1 0 6 0 5 45 A TO Blk Stl 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 3 8 2 2 7 4 0 0 0 0 0 1 7 29 Min 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 7 200 Game: 15-51 29.4% Game: 5-14 35.7% Game: 10-20 50.0% 13 11 25 38 26 10 23 3 1 12 19 19 Deadball Rebounds 2 Maryland 109 • 1-0 ## 05 32 42 01 04 00 02 03 12 15 22 Total 3-Ptr Rebounds FG-FGA FG-FGA FT-FTA Off Def Tot PF Player Malina Howard S. Walker-Kimbrough Brionna Jones Laurin Mincy Lexie Brown Aja Ellison Kiara Leslie Brene Moseley Kristen Confroy Chloe Pavlech Tierney Pfirman Team Totals FG % 1st Half: 21-33 63.6% 3FG % 1st Half: 3-10 30.0% FT % 1st Half: 12-13 92.3% f f c g g 3-5 3-5 5-7 2-6 4-8 1-1 6-9 3-6 3-8 3-6 7-8 0-2 0-0 0-0 0-1 2-5 0-0 2-5 1-2 0-3 2-3 0-0 40-69 7-21 TP A TO Blk Stl 0 3 3 0 10 3 2 1 0 1 2 10 0 3 1 4 5 4 10 0 1 2 5 7 2 9 5 0 1 1 2 1 12 4 1 0 1 1 2 2 0 1 1 6 7 1 16 0 2 1 1 2 2 8 4 3 1 2 3 0 6 7 0 0 1 1 3 10 1 1 5 6 11 2 16 2 2 1 1 2 1 22-26 14 31 45 19 109 26 17 2nd half: 19-36 52.8% 2nd half: 4-11 36.4% 2nd half: 10-13 76.9% 4-4 4-4 0-1 5-5 2-2 0-2 2-3 1-1 0-0 2-2 2-2 2 0 4 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 3 1 3 0 1 3 1 2 1 Min 23 15 16 21 18 13 20 20 22 15 17 9 17 200 Game: 40-69 58.0% Game: 7-21 33.3% Game: 22-26 84.6% Deadball Rebounds 1,1 Officials: Frank Steratore, Kevin Pethtel, Missy Brooks Technical fouls: Mount St. Mary's-None. Maryland-None. Attendance: 4177 Score by periods Mount St. Mary's Maryland 1st 25 57 2nd 20 52 Total 45 109 Last FG - MOUNT-W 2nd-06:06, UMD 2nd-00:33. Largest lead - MOUNT-W None, UMD by 64 2nd-00:33. MOUNT-W led for 00:00. UMD led for 38:52. Game was tied for 01:06. Points MOUNTUMD In Paint 14 48 Off T/O 6 38 2nd Fast Chance Break 5 0 17 22 Bench 15 58 Score tied - 0 times. Lead changed - 0 times. Junior Tierney Pfirman registered her second career double-double with 16 points and 11 assists as the No. 8 Maryland women’s basketball team (1-0, 0-0 B1G) defeated Mount St. Mary’s 109-45 in their season opener. Seven Terrapins registered double-digit points, contributing to the all-around effort. “I thought we had tremendous energy coming out on the tip,” Head coach Brenda Frese said. “You could tell we were excited and ready to play. I though we set the tone early, and we were aggressive early on... It was a really good game for us to begin with and build on.” The Terrapins dominated in the first half, racking up a 57-24 lead while limiting The Mount to just 31 percent shooting. Maryland started the game on a 9-0 run, led by five points from sophomore Lexie Brown. A layup from freshman Kristen Confroy forced the Mount to take a timeout. Pfirman led the Terrapins’ offense in the first with 14 points. She notched eight straight as Maryland increased its lead to 53-21. Senior Laurin Mincy went 5-of5 from the free throw line and grabbed seven rebounds. The Terps dished the ball 16 times on 21 field goals in the first half, led by Confroy’s six assists. The team picked up where it left off at the start of the second half, jumping out with a 20-5 run to extend the lead to 77-29. Chloe Pavlech drained back-to-back threepoint shots with a little under six minutes to play to cement the Terps victory, giving them a 94-43 lead at the time. A Brene Moseley layup with 2:13 left in the game put the Terps over the century mark for the game. This marks the first time the Terrapins have broken 100 points in a regular season opener since defeating Siena 107-66 on November 18, 2005. The Terps closed the game on a 13-0 run over the final 2:46. Freshman Kiara Leslie led the Terps in the second half with 14 points and five rebounds. Shatori Walker-Kimbrough and Chloe Pavlech both added eight points in the half as well. Maryland’s defense held strong throughout the game, holding the Mount to 29 percent field-goal shooting and forcing 17 turnovers. MARYLAND TERRAPINS: 2006 NCAA Champions • 2014 Final Four Page 29 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball 2014-15 Maryland Women's Basketball Maryland Combined Team Statistics (as of Nov 14, 2014) All games RECORD: ALL GAMES CONFERENCE NON-CONFERENCE ## 22 02 04 32 05 15 42 01 03 12 00 Player gp-gs Tierney Pfirman Kiara Leslie Lexie Brown S.Walker-Kimbrough Malina Howard Chloe Pavlech Brionna Jones Laurin Mincy Brene Moseley Kristen Confroy Aja Ellison Team Total.......... Opponents...... 1-0 1-0 1-1 1-1 1-1 1-0 1-1 1-1 1-0 1-0 1-0 1 1 min 17 20 18 15 23 15 16 21 20 22 13 OVERALL 1-0 0-0 1-0 Total 3-Point avg fg-fga fg% 3fg-fga 3fg% 17.0 20.0 18.0 15.0 23.0 15.0 16.0 21.0 20.0 22.0 13.0 200 200 TEAM STATISTICS SCORING Points per game Scoringmargin FIELDGOALS-ATT Field goal pct 3POINTFG-ATT 3-point FG pct 3-pt FG made per game FREETHROWS-ATT Free throw pct F-Throws made per game REBOUNDS Rebounds per game Reboundingmargin ASSISTS Assists per game TURNOVERS Turnovers per game Turnovermargin Assist/turnoverratio STEALS Steals per game BLOCKS Blocks per game ATTENDANCE Homegames-Avg/Game Neutralsite-Avg/Game UMD 109 109.0 +64.0 40-69 .580 7-21 .333 7.0 22-26 .846 22.0 45 45.0 +15.0 26 26.0 17 17.0 +12.0 1.5 17 17.0 9 9.0 4177 1-4177 - Score by Periods Maryland Opponents Totals 109 45 Page 30 1st 2nd 57 52 25 20 HOME 1-0 0-0 1-0 7-8 6-9 4-8 3-5 3-5 3-6 5-7 2-6 3-6 3-8 1-1 40-69 15-51 .875 .667 .500 .600 .600 .500 .714 .333 .500 .375 F-Throw ft-fta ft% 1.000 0-0 2-5 2-5 0-0 0-2 2-3 0-0 0-1 1-2 0-3 0-0 .000 .400 .400 .000 .000 .667 .000 .000 .500 .000 .000 .580 .294 7-21 5-14 .333 22-26 .357 10-20 OPP 45 45.0 15-51 .294 5-14 .357 5.0 10-20 .500 10.0 30 30.0 7 7.0 29 29.0 0.2 7 7.0 2 2.0 0 0-0 0-0 AWAY 0-0 0-0 0-0 2-2 2-3 2-2 4-4 4-4 2-2 0-1 5-5 1-1 0-0 0-2 Date 11/14/14 1.000 .667 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 .000 1.000 1.000 .000 .000 .846 .500 off 5 1 1 1 0 0 1 2 1 1 0 1 14 12 NEUTRAL 0-0 0-0 0-0 Rebounds def tot 6 6 1 0 3 1 4 5 1 2 1 1 31 18 11 7 2 1 3 1 5 7 2 3 1 2 45 30 avg 11.0 7.0 2.0 1.0 3.0 1.0 5.0 7.0 2.0 3.0 1.0 45.0 30.0 Opponent MOUNTST.MARY'S pf dq a 2 1 1 2 0 3 4 2 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 4 0 3 1 0 5 4 7 0 19 20 0 - 26 7 W to blk stl 2 2 1 3 2 1 1 0 3 0 1 1 17 29 0 1 0 0 2 0 4 0 0 0 2 1 1 3 2 0 2 3 1 3 1 0 pts 16 16 12 10 10 10 10 9 8 6 2 avg 16.0 16.0 12.0 10.0 10.0 10.0 10.0 9.0 8.0 6.0 2.0 9 17 109 109.0 2 7 45 45.0 Score 109-45 Att. 4177 * - Conference game 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball Notes 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball 2014-15 Maryland Women's Basketball Maryland Team Game-by-Game (as of Nov 14, 2014) All games TEAM STATISTICS Opponent MOUNTST.MARY'S Maryland Opponents Gamesplayed:1 Points/game:109.0 FGPct:58.0 3FGPct:33.3 FTPct:84.6 Date Score 11/14/14 109-45 W 109 45 Total fg-fga 3-Pointers pct 3fg-fga pct Free throws ft-fta pct off 14 12 40-69 .580 7-21 .333 22-26 .846 40-69 15-51 .580 .294 7-21 5-14 .333 .357 22-26 10-20 .846 .500 14 Rebounds def tot 31 45 45.0 19 26 17 avg pf a t/o blk stl 9 17 109 109.0 31 18 45 45.0 30 30.0 19 20 9 2 26 7 17 29 17 7 pts avg 109 109.0 45 45.0 Rebounds/game:45.0 Assists/game:26.0 Turnovers/game:17.0 Assist/turnoverratio:1.5 Steals/game:17.0 Blocks/game:9.0 MARYLAND TERRAPINS: 2006 NCAA Champions • 2014 Final Four Page 31 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball 2014-15 Maryland Women's Basketball Maryland Team Game-by-Game Comparison (as of Nov 14, 2014) All games Opponent MOUNTST.MARY'S 1st 2nd 57/25 52/20 Score 109-45 Mar +64 Total FG 40-69/15-51 FG Pct .580/.294 3-Pointers 7-21/5-14 3FG Pct .333/.357 Free Throws 22-26/10-20 FT Pct .846/.500 Rebounds 45/30 +15 Assist T/Over 26/7 17/29 Block 9/2 Steal 17/7 Fouls 19/20 Note:GametotalsaredisplayedintheformatTEAM/OPPONENTforeachcategory Page 32 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball Notes 2014-15 Maryland Women’s Basketball 2014-15 Maryland Women's Basketball Maryland Game-by-Game Highs (as of Nov 14, 2014) All games Opponent MOUNTST.MARY'S Date 11/14/14 Score Points 109-45 16-KiaraLeslie Tierney Pfirman Rebounds 11-TierneyPfirman MARYLAND TERRAPINS: 2006 NCAA Champions • 2014 Final Four Assists 7-KristenConfroy Steals 3-BreneMoseley Brionna Jones Lexie Brown Blocked shots 4-BrionnaJones Page 33
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